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DWP making tweak to both new and old basic state pension this week

DWP making tweak to both new and old basic state pension this week

Yahoo06-04-2025

The Department for Work and Pensions is tweaking both the New and Basic State Pension this week. Under the triple-lock guarantee, from April the DWP single state pension will increase from £221.20 per week (£11,502 per year) to £230.30 per week (£11,975 per year).
The 'old' state pension will increase from £169.50 per week (£8,814 per year) to £176.45 per week (£9,175 per year). Last year, the ONS revealed that the average earnings growth in the three months to July is 4.1%, up from its previous estimate of 4%.
The single state pension is set to exceed the personal allowance of £12,570 by 2027/28, even if the benefit increases by only 2.5% a year (the lowest possible element of the triple-lock guarantee).
READ MORE: Millions warned to 'brace' for HMRC rule change which kicks in Sunday morning
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READ MORE HMRC urges any parent earning under £200,000 to claim free £2,000 perk
At some point during this Parliament, the new government will need to address the thorny question of what the state pension should be worth and when Brits should receive.
Rachel Vahey, head of public policy at AJ Bell, comments: 'UK pensioners should from next April see a sizeable increase to their state pension of almost £500 a year, to bring it to just under £12,000.
'The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, may choose to shout out about this inflation-beating boost in her first Budget in two weeks' time. Criticism of the decision to scrap the Winter Fuel Payment for all pensioners except those that claim Pension Credit still lingers, and the government will hope this rise in Brits' state pensions will publicly reinforce its commitment to the triple-lock, as well as overshadowing the £200 most pensioners will lose this winter.
'But how long they can keep these promises remains to be seen. The state pension is now at a level perilously close to the frozen personal allowance and should overtake it in two years' time. At that point something must surely give. But slowing the increase in state pension growth or unfreezing the personal allowance both seem unlikely.
'It could be that this fast-approaching crunch time means the government will finally be forced to address the question of how much the state pension should really offer, at what age, and how it can increase payments sustainably each year.'

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