https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/oct/26/ni-parents-caught-in-uk-crackdown-lose-child-benefit-after-travelling-via-dublin

Parents in Northern Ireland have had their child support payments stopped as part of the UK government’s crackdown on alleged benefit fraud simply because they returned from a holiday via Dublin airport.

So far 346 families have had their benefits frozen, an investigation by NI online newspaper, the Detail, shared with the Guardian, has discovered.

The extraordinary mistake comes in the wake of a new anti-fraud system designed to track those who leave the country but do not come back after eight weeks, raising a red flag at HMRC for possible emigration.

The problem in Northern Ireland is many families routinely fly out of Belfast but return via Dublin, which is often cheaper and offers many more flights, leaving HMRC with the impression a passenger has not returned.

With no passport checks on the Irish border, the government has no data to show a passenger might have driven or taken a bus or train back to Northern Ireland.

Among those whose benefits were stopped were Mark Toal, an NHS nurse in Belfast, and his wife, Louise.

Along with their two children, aged 17 and 13, they travelled to England in 2022 via Dublin airport for a holiday. It cost £10 to get a bus to the Irish capital and flights were cheaper.

To his shock and surprise, on 10 October this year HMRC wrote to him to say his child benefit was stopped. Their decision appeared to be based on data that showed they had taken a flight from England to Dublin – a flight which was, in fact, their return journey.

“We have information which shows that you left the UK on 15 August 2022 and travelled to Ireland. This was more than eight weeks ago, and we have no record of your return,” the letter said.

Toal could not believe what he was reading. “I was on the phone to them [HMRC] for 45 minutes trying to sort this out. I did lose my temper, I was very annoyed, it boiled my blood,” he said.

After telling HMRC he had not left the country and lived in Northern Ireland, Toal expected some sympathy.

Instead he was faced with a barrage of 70 questions; including a demand for boarding passes from three years ago, three months of bank statements, and letters from his children’s school and hospital records.

He was also asked if he was an adoptive or biological parent.

“I pointed out to them that I have been paying tax to the UK government for the past 30 years, and I haven’t moved address in 23 years, and been working in the same job since 2016,” said Toal.

“Every time I travel from England, Scotland or Wales from Dublin airport will I be asked for all this again? Will I have to send them a letter saying ‘please don’t stop my child benefit?’”

Maria, who asked that her real name was not used, received a similar letter from HMRC on 9 October, after she took a short holiday in Italy in May, leaving the UK from Belfast but returning to Northern Ireland via Dublin.

When Maria protested, she too was hit with long list of demands to provide proof of being a Northern Ireland resident.

“We tried to push back on having to provide all these documents, but they said this is not within our remit, you have to send the documentation because that department is very strict.

“I felt exhausted to be honest. I felt like I was literally in a Kafkaesque process.”

The HMRC move follows a government crackdown launched in August “to save £350m” on fraudulent benefit claims.

But Northern Irish MPs have accused HMRC of failing to factor in the difference with Great Britain and the fact there is an invisible border with the Republic with no passport checks, on account of the 1998 peace deal.

“A basic understanding of the north would give them pause,” said Dáire Hughes, Sinn Féin MP for Newry and Armagh, who is representing 14 families whose benefits were frozen. “That would obviously be outside of the gaze of the Home Office.”

Hughes said the HMRC move had caused “distress” to “families who have done nothing wrong”. He called the new system “not fit for purpose”.

South Belfast MP Claire Hanna, leader of the SDLP party, called on HMRC to reveal where they got their data and why they were using it as a basis of suspicion of fraud. She has used Dublin airport herself to return from Westminster when there were no flights to Belfast after late evening votes.

“This is yet another policy that doesn’t seem to have considered the realities of life on the island of Ireland,” she said.

“Many families will use Dublin airport for one or more parts of their journey, indeed it is closer than Belfast international for a lot of NI residents.

“We need to have full transparency on what data HMRC are accessing so families do not face loss of this benefit or piles of unnecessary bureaucracy.”

HMRC has apologised for its error but indicated it would continue to do checks. “We’re sorry that a small number of customers in Northern Ireland have mistakenly had their child benefit payments suspended,” it said.

It added that it had “reinstated payments and closed inquires to 134 individuals”.

A further 46 families had payments reinstated while inquiries were pending, while 166 payments remained suspended with inquiries ongoing, it said.

by blorg

15 comments
  1. I’m puzzled. How can you be on benefits and take your family away on holiday? Someone please explain.

  2. Reminds me of the time I got my dole cut off for going to a funeral.

    I was on the brew briefly in my mid 20s when a relative died. Had to travel down to Mullingar for the service.

    The day of the funeral coincided with the day that I was due to sign on. I phoned the dole office to see if I could sign on a day early or if it was possible to skip a week. After explaining what I thought were mitigating circumstances, I was told that because I was “leaving the country”, I would be signed off and then have to sign on again when I arrived back.

    If I had lied and claimed to be ill, or going to a funeral in the North, or any number of other excuses I would have been fine. Lost most of a weeks dole in the transition of it, and back then it was only about 50 quid a week.

    While I am sure there are a small number of people taking the piss, situations like mine, or flying into Dublin need a little bit more common sense when being dealt with.

  3. To be fair though..

    The benefits system has been treated like an open till by organised overseas fraud gangs – [Bulgarian syndicates](https://www.gov.uk/government/news/fraudsters-behind-539-million-benefits-scam-brought-to-justice-in-countrys-largest-benefit-fraud-case?) nicking £53 million through fake Universal Credit claims, [Romanian rackets](https://www-mirror-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/fake-kids-scam-rakes-in-millions-198349.amp?amp_gsa=1&amp_js_v=a9&usqp=mq331AQIUAKwASCAAgM%3D#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=17614947172185&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.mirror.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fuk-news%2Ffake-kids-scam-rakes-in-millions-198349) setting up ghost children to siphon millions in payments, [Polish scammers](https://www.ukfinance.org.uk/press/press-releases/organised-criminal-gang-behind-gbp-385k-benefit-fraud-jailed-for-over-eight-years?) using stolen IDs over lockdown to milk the system with a slew of fraudulent claims and payments. These aren’t plucky hustlers. they’re professional shysters, draining money meant for those who genuinely need it domestically.

    The above highlights a flaw in the current system and shows the need for refinement to spare people like Maria the misdirected scrutiny and disruptions.

    Government agencies do need to develop a mutually agreeable system of information exchange with other jurisdictions – iron out the flaws so the net catches only the sharks, not the shoal.

    Benefit fraud isn’t a victimless crime though – every pound stolen by a foreign gang is a pound taken from hospitals, schools, and families who play by the rules.

    On evidence of past fraud cases – The anti fraud measures are long overdue and very necessary. It needs a number of refinements and a finer sieve, not an open door.

  4. Think on how much you have to hate taigs to convince yourself you actually *prefer* suffering through these almost daily Kafkaesque bureaucratic nightmares to just, you know, being Irish and having an island nation called Ireland 

    The so called union of equals is such a patently obvious load of bollocks if you step back and scrutinise it for like, 5 minutes lol

  5. You would think that HMRC would be able to join the dots and see that he was still working in NI and paying tax, no?

  6. I hope all that go reinstated got back pay, only fair for such objective stupidity by HMRC. This is was not a justifiable blind spot, as Hughes said, a basic bit of understanding should have prevented this idiocy.

  7. HMRC already get payroll data on anyone employed by the government in order to cut down on fraudulent claims. All they had to do was match data they already have.

  8. > “We’re sorry that a small number of **customers** in Northern Ireland have mistakenly had their child benefit payments suspended,”

    No. Just no.

  9. Bloody hell. That said, these departments don’t talk to each other, so even if they have the data needed they don’t bother checking it. Maybe they don’t know they can.

  10. Did any of the impacted parents have an Irish passport or are they only able to track them for having a uk passport?

  11. Why is HMRC describing us as ‘customers’. That’s pretty wild language from a government department.

  12. My friend works in social welfare in Dublin and says this is about Irish travelers and Roma folks mostly but other ‘non nationals’ basically bouncing between Ireland and NI and GB and claiming benefits in each. It’s been happening forever but a massive spike in it the last few years and the numbers aren’t small at all. Some not even in the state and having it sent to their accounts directly and only having to turn up every few months to sign on (in Ireland can’t speak to NI) children’s allowance in particular is being walloped by people literally borrowing kids to claim it.
    Only surprise is the tabloid / racist media hasn’t picked up on it yet to make it a thing

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