TENS of thousands of households in Maldon are potentially eligible for the council tax rebate, new figures show, as Chancellor Rishi Sunak provides more help amid the cost of living crisis.

Mr Sunak unveiled a range of financial support last week to add to the £150 council tax rebate for almost every household between bands A to D.

This included a universal £400 grant to help pay for rising energy bills in October, a one-off £650 payment for those on means-tested benefits, a £300 grant for pensioners receiving winter fuel payments and £150 to those receiving certain disability allowances.

Valuation Office Agency figures show there were 20,040 properties classified between council tax bands A to D in Maldon as of March 31 – 68 per cent of the 29,370 total households in the area.

All occupiers in these properties are eligible for the rebate, except for where the owner is liable for council tax, such as a house of multiple occupancy or residential care home.

Charity National Energy Action praised the more targeted help ahead of an "utterly disastrous" winter for many who will be pushed into fuel poverty, but said this does not apply to the council tax rebate.

NEA said the current classification misses 600,000 households on low incomes and that it holds "serious concerns" about the implementation of the rebate.

"Councils across England and Wales have their own way of administering the scheme, creating a postcode lottery for struggling households," said chief executive Adam Scorer.

However, the range of extra measures Mr Sunak announced will help eight million of the lowest-income households, eight million pensioner households and a further six million currently receiving non means-tested disability benefits, the Chancellor claimed.

On announcing the £15 billion support package, which will be part-funded by a windfall tax on oil and gas firms, expected to raise £5billion, Mr Sunak said: "This Government will not sit idly by while there is a risk that some in our country might be set so far back that they might never recover.

"That is simply unacceptable, and we will never allow it to happen."