Homeless ex‐armed forces advice

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If you're leaving the armed services, or you are a former member, you may be entitled to extra help if you become homeless.

Practical steps to take:

  • Register for the Council’s housing allocation scheme 
  • Get help with housing or apply as homeless before you're discharged
  • Find out what help you are entitle to from healthcare and housing to employability, finances, personal relationships and more, by visiting Veterans Gateway

Homelessness rights for ex-forces

You may qualify for help from Ipswich Borough Council if you are a former member of the armed forces and are homeless or threatened with homelessness. In addition you will have to prove to the Council that you are eligible for housing assistance, and have not made yourself intentionally homeless.

Subject to you satisfying the above criteria Ipswich Borough Council has to help you with both emergency and longer-term accommodation if it is accepted that you are homeless and in priority need with regard to needing accommodation.

The Council must consider if it can help you using both general rules that apply to everyone and special rules that apply to people who were in the forces.

General rules for people in priority need

It can be easier to get help if you qualify under the general rules for people in priority need, for example if you have dependent children or are pregnant.

The Council should also look to see if you are vulnerable in some way. This may involve showing how a disability, mental health problem, addiction or other issue effects your ability to secure housing for yourself compared with other people who are homeless.

Extra homelessness rules for the armed forces 

You should also be treated as being vulnerable and therefore in priority need for accommodation if you can show that your vulnerability is as a result of being a former member of the armed forces.

When deciding this, the Council may consider:

  • How long you were in the forces and what role you had
  • If you spent any time in a military hospital
  • If you were released from service on medical grounds (and have a Medical History Release Form)
  • If you have had accommodation since leaving service and if you have been able to obtain or maintain accommodation since you left
  • How long it has been since you left service

To help support your case, you may need to provide medical evidence from the MOD, including a Medical History Release Form (if you were given one). It can be hard to establish that you are vulnerable.

You may need to seek independent legal advice or help from a specialist agency to make representations on your behalf if this council decides that you do not meet the criteria set out above, and therefore it does not owe a duty to you to provide you with accommodation.

Re-housing Options

To be accepted as homeless in the local council area where you were based, you must be able to show that you have a local connection with the local council where your base was situated.

You may be able to show a local connection with that area if you:

  • Currently work in the area
  • Have lived in the area for six out of the last 12 months or three out of the last five years
  • Live with a partner who currently works in the area

If you have left the forces and are not yet working for another employer in the area, you won't be able to show a local connection through working in the area. However, you may still be able to show that you have a local connection as the time you spent living or working in the area may still count.

You should also consider if you are able to show a local connection with this or another local council area where you have close family connections.

Additional priority will be awarded on the Councils Housing register to then following categories of people:

  • Former members of the Armed Forces 
  • Serving members of the Armed Forces who need to move because of a serious injury, medical condition or disability sustained as a result of their service;
  • Bereaved spouses and civil partners of members of the Armed Forces leaving Services Family Accommodation following the death of their spouse or partner;
  • Serving or former members of the Reserve Forces  who need to move because of a serious injury, medical condition or disability sustained as a result of their service

Applying as homeless before discharge from the forces

Contact the Housing Options Team if you think you will be homeless after discharge from the services. The Council should not wait until you are made homeless before it helps you.

Upon the production of a letter of discharge or some other evidence that confirms the date of your discharge from the Forces, the Council should accept that from the date of discharge you will become homeless. In the event that you have not sought any housing assistance from this council prior to your discharge from the Forces you may need to stay in your accommodation as long as possible and wait for Defence Estates to evict you.

Defence Estates have to give you a Notice to Vacate before they can take you to court in order that they can obtain a possession order. You can use any Notice to Vacate and any possession order that is obtained against you as evidence in support of your homelessness application.

Ex-forces and single, homeless and on the streets

Many single homeless people don't qualify for help from the Council or any other local authority. There is a range of services for people who find themselves homeless and on the streets, for example:

  • The Chapman Centre, Black Horse Lane offers advice and assistance open Monday to Friday to 2pm
  • The Royal British Legion might be able to help with a rent deposit.
  • SSAFA provide housing advice to people currently serving in the forces and ex-services personnel and their families. Contact SSAFA.

Contact Details

Ipswich Borough Council,
Housing Options,
3E Grafton House, 
15-17 Russell Road,
Ipswich, 
IP1 2DE

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01473 432000

Office Hours

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07736 826025

Out of Hours