What Education Maintenance Allowance (EMA) is
Education Maintenance Allowance (EMA) is a weekly payment of £30, paid directly to young people aged 16 to 19 who continue in full-time education at school.
You'll need to apply for EMA each academic year.
Who can get EMA
You can get EMA if you're aged between 16 and 19 and are continuing your education at school.
You can apply for EMA if:
- you go to a school in the Renfrewshire area
- your household earns less than the income thresholds set by the Scottish Government, listed below
- your course is at least 21 hours of guided learning per week
- you agree and sign a valid learning agreement with your school.
A learning agreement sets out what's expected of you around attendance and coursework.
You can find out more about learning agreements in the ‘After you apply’ section below.
Household income
We look at the income of your parents or carers who live with you when awarding EMA.
To qualify for EMA, your household income must be no more than:
- £24,421 per year before tax, if there’s 1 dependent child in full time education
- £26,884 per year before tax, if there’s more than 1 dependent child in full time education.
For EMA applications for the 2026 to 2027 school year, we'll assess your parents' or carers' household income for the previous financial year (April 2025 to April 2026).
EMA and benefits
EMAs will not affect any Tax Credit or other benefit payments your family receives from the government.
It will not affect any money you earn from a part-time job either.
Who cannot get EMA
You cannot get EMA if:
- you're under the age of 16
- you’re over the age of 19
- you have left school and are attending college – you should apply directly to the college for EMA.
How much you’ll get
If your application is approved and you’re awarded EMA, you'll get an EMA payment of £30 per week.
This will be paid every 2 weeks. Each payment covers the 2 weeks that just passed.
You'll only get paid if you meet the agreed attendance in your learning agreement.
EMA is not paid during school holidays in October, Christmas, Easter, or the summer holidays. It’s only paid when you’re at school during term time.
You’ll continue to get EMA payments if you’re on work experience during term time, but only if the work experience is a pre-arranged part of your course.
Your EMA is paid directly into your bank account. If you do not have a bank or building society account, you'll need to open one.
Your account must be able to accept BACS payments (these are payments that are paid electronically from one bank account to another). Check with your bank if you're not sure.
You can get EMA for up to 3 years. Vulnerable young people may receive support for up to 3 years within a 4-year period.
When you can start to receive EMA
See when you can start to receive EMA during the 2026 to 2027 school year:
| Your date of birth: | Receive EMA from: |
|---|---|
| Born between 1 March 2007 and 30 September 2010 | August 2026 |
| Born between 1 October 2010 and 28 February 2011 | January 2027 |
You can submit your EMA application early, even if you’re not entitled to receive payments until January.
If you're aged 16 or over and you have not yet applied for EMA:
- if you send your application before 30 September 2026, your payments may be backdated to the start of the school year
- if you send your application between 1 October 2026 and 28 February 2027, your payments will begin from the date we receive your application.
If you will turn 16 years old between 1 October 2026 and 28 February 2027, your payments may be backdated to the start of the January 2027 term. You must apply by 28 February 2027 to receive backdated payments.
We will not accept any applications for the 2026 to 2027 school year after 31 March 2027.
You'll only receive backdated payments to the August or January terms if you have met the conditions or your learning agreement.
Otherwise, payments will be made from the date we received your application.
Payments after summer exam period
S4 and S5 students returning for a further academic year
If you’ll remain in school for the next academic session, you’ll be eligible to receive EMA payments to the end of the academic year (usually June), if you meet the requirements of your learning agreement.
S4 and S5 students leaving school at the end of the academic year
If you’re in S4 and S5 and do not plan to remain in school after the exam period is over, you’ll be eligible to receive an EMA until the end of the exam period.
S6 students leaving school at the end of the academic year
If you’re in S6, you’ll be paid until the end of the exam period.
Before you apply
You'll need to provide:
- your Qualifications Scotland Scottish Candidate Number (SCN)
- their contact phone number and email address
- the name of the school and your year of study
- the name, sort code, and account number of your bank or building society – this needs to be your own account and cannot belong to someone else.
Your parent or carer will need to provide:
- their name, address and relationship to you
- their contact phone number and email address.
Your parent or carer will also need to provide evidence of household income, including one of the following:
- a P60 or a statement of earnings
- a statement of self-employment (Inland Revenue form SA302).
They must also provide proof of any benefits, Universal Credit, or pensions they receive.
They can upload files from a computer or laptop. Or they can use a camera enabled device, like a smartphone or tablet, to take photos of the documents and upload them.
If your parents or carers are self employed
If your parents or carers cannot provide the relevant documentation to confirm their income details, we’ll process your application as a provisional award.
We’ll make weekly payments for any provisional award but only for part of the academic year.
This award will then be put on hold until we receive the relevant finalised income details.
If we assess your award provisionally, you must give us the final income details no later than 31 May 2027.
If you need further information on providing documentation, email us at ema.els@renfrewshire.gov.uk.
How to apply for EMA
Apply online
If you have not created an online account with us before, you'll need to register for MyAccount through mygov.scot. You only need an email address to sign up.
If you've already registered for MyAccount, you do not need to do it again.
Applications for EMA for the 2026 to 2027 school year will close on 31 March 2027.
After you’ve applied
We'll email you with a case reference number, and we'll assess your application.
We'll contact you if we need any more information.
We'll aim to let you know our decision within 28 working days.
If you apply before school starts in August, we'll let you know by email if you have been awarded EMA.
We'll start to send award packs by post from August. The award pack will contain a learning agreement and a letter telling you what you need to do with the learning agreement.
If you apply at any other time during the school year, we'll send you an award pack by post if your application has been awarded.
You must return your learning agreement within 3 weeks of receiving your award pack.
You'll start receiving EMA payments after you’ve signed your learning agreement with your school and we’ve received the signed agreement from them.
Learning agreement
To receive EMA payments, you must have signed an EMA learning agreement. It must also be signed by your parent or carer and your school.
If you are disabled or have additional support needs (ASN), you do not need to sign the learning agreement.
A new EMA learning agreement must be completed for each academic year.
We will only pay you if you meet the conditions set out in the learning agreement.
We may stop EMA payments if the school informs us that you have failed to meet the conditions of your learning agreement.
If you have a programme of learning at more than one school, you’ll need to have a separate EMA learning agreement signed by each school you are registered at.
If your programme of learning changes and you start another course at school, the EMA learning agreement will be changed. This will need to be signed by you and the school.
If you change school during the year, a new EMA learning agreement will need to be signed by you, the school, and your parent or carer.
We will not accept learning agreements for the 2026 to 2027 school year after 31 May 2027.
Why an EMA payment may be stopped
Your school may recommend that we stop paying an EMA. This could be based on a number of reasons, including:
Absence
We may stop payment if you do not maintain 100% attendance at school
If you’re sick or cannot attend school, you’ll need to provide evidence.
You should collect self-certificates from the school office on the first day you return from sickness and return this to the school office within 3 school days.
You can self-certify for up to 5 full days or 10 half days of sickness in the academic year.
After this, you’ll need to produce a medical certificate. You should send a medical certificate to your school as soon as possible.
If your medical absence extends over 3 weeks, it will be reviewed by the headteacher. The school will consider your individual circumstances.
If you’re absent for reasons other than illness – for example, for interviews, dental appointments, or hospital appointments – you should tell your school immediately.
Persistent late coming
You’ll receive a warning after 5 unexplained or unacceptable late comings to school.
After a warning, if you have a further 2 late comings in any one week, we’ll stop payment for that week.
Conduct
We may withhold payment if you breach the school’s discipline policy – for example, if there are 2 behaviour referrals during a fortnight.
Exclusions
We will not make payments if you have been excluded from school.
Reassessment of an EMA decision
You can ask us to reassess our decision if:
- your earlier EMA application was unsuccessful
- your household income falls during the year to within the income thresholds.
You must ask us for a reassessment and provide evidence to confirm the change in circumstance and the current level of household income.
To do this, email us at ema.els@renfrewshire.gov.uk.
We will not reassess your EMA if your household income rises during the year.
More information
If you need more information on EMA or eligibility, email us at ema.els@renfrewshire.gov.uk.