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  • If everyone living in the house (the number is irrelevant) is either a child or is on the exempt list. For example, someone with a severe mental disability and their live in carer. They are both exempt, so the number of adults living in the property is zero. Zero = 50% off.

    If one person in the property isn't exempt and is an adult then you have one adult in the house. The number of children and other exempt people doesn't matter - there's one adult in the house and a single adult household gets 25% off.

    If you have two or more adults in the property (the number of children or exempt adults also living there is irrelevant) then you get naaaaafin off.

    However, and I suspect that this is where the problem lies, there's a separate rule (dealt with here) which applies only to students so that if everyone in the house is a full-time student then there's a total exemption.

    Easy!

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