As bluebell mentioned, not all pensioners are exempt from the so-called bedroom tax. Those in mixed-age relationships, where one is of retirement age but the other is not, face a potentially huge fall in living standard, on top of being hit by the bedroom tax. Government ministers still keep coming out with the line "Pensioners will not be affected", but fail to mention that this does not apply to these mixed-age couples once Universal Credit is brought in. Over 90 000 people fall into that catagory.
If you are one of those people, but are already in receipt of Pension Credit, you don't need to worry - yet - as you will continue to get it.
However, and here's the rub - if you lose entitlement to Pension Credit, however briefly, you will not be able to claim it again at a later date.
In other words, if the younger partner manages to find a well-paid, but temporary job, you will not be able to claim Pension Credit again when that job ends. You will both be treated as if you were of working-age, meaning the younger partner will have to claim Universal Credit. Hence much lower benefit, bedroom tax, and almost certainly no eligibility for age-related means-tested benefits such as cold-weather payments.
I raised this topic yesterday in the Politics section, under the heading "Pensioners and Bedroom Tax".
If any of you are interested/worried enough to want to know more, here is the link to a very informative blog:
speye.wordpress.com/2013/02/03/pensioners-hit-by-75m-bedroom-tax-this-year/