Looking for advice for my wife's future state pension. She was working prior to our sons birth in 2012 but since then has remained off work to care for him ( He has autism and there are a lot of appointments etc which made work very difficult ) . I'm wondering now about her state pension in the future and if she will be able to get one. She was receiving carers benefit for a while but once it changed to carers allowance she received zero as it was means tested.
Depending on when she reaches pension age, different rules will apply. Periods of caring should be given some recognition under both systems.
Under the old system (which still applies, but will likely be phased out within the next couple of years), periods of providing full-time care are taken out of the calculation, so that your average number of contributions stays the same. See the above link from the other poster about the Homemakers Scheme that applies under the current rules.
Under the new Total Contributions Approach, up to 20 years of Home Caring can count towards building your pension entitlement. See here for details
https://www.citizensinformation.ie/...insurance_prsi/homecaring_periods_scheme.html
Currently, both systems apply, and they will give you the one which is more beneficial. The intention was to move to the Total Contribution Approach for all claims, but this has not happened yet.
As the rules are currently changing and as this is a politically hot issue, you can't guarantee what the rules will be in the future. There shouldn't be an adverse affect of caring under either system, but for an exact calculation on pension entitlement, she should get a copy of her social insurance record and speak to someone who can advise her fully. If pension age is some time away, just be aware that the rules, and people's circumstances change, so any information she gets now will need to be reviewed regularly.