Household Worksheet (Lifeline)
What is the purpose of the worksheet
Use this worksheet if someone else at your address gets Lifeline. The answers to these questions will help you find out if there is more than one household at your address.
What is a household?
A household is a group of people who live together and share income and expenses (even if they are not related to each other).
Examples of one household:
• A married couple who live together are one household. They must share one Lifelinebenefit.
• A parent/guardian and child who live together are one household. They must share oneLifeline benefit.
• An adult who lives with friends or family who financially support him/her are onehousehold. They must share one Lifeline benefit.
Examples of more than one household:
• 4 roommates who live together but do not share money are 4 households. They can haveone Lifeline benefit each, 4 total.
• 30 seniors who live in an assisted-living home are 30 households. They can have oneLifeline benefit each, 30 total.
Household expenses
A household shares expenses. Household expenses include, but are not limited to, food, healthcare expenses, and the cost of renting or paying a mortgage on your place of residence and utilities.
Income
Households share income. Income includes salary, public assistance benefits, social security payments, pensions, unemployment compensation, veteran’s benefits, inheritances, alimony, child support payments, worker’s compensation benefits, gifts, and lottery winnings.