logo
DWP sends urgent warning to Universal Credit claimants who have money in savings

DWP sends urgent warning to Universal Credit claimants who have money in savings

Daily Mirror5 days ago
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has issued a warning to anyone who claims Universal Credit and has any amount in savings
A stark warning has been issued to millions of Universal Credit recipients who have any amount in savings. It's common knowledge that if your savings surpass £16,000, you're not eligible for Universal Credit.

However, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is reminding Universal Credit claimants that this is simply the upper capital limit, and having savings less than this can still affect your benefit amount.

The lower limit for savings on Universal Credit is actually £6,000. For every £250 you have above this, your payment will be reduced by £4.35. This is also rounded up, so if you have £6,400 in savings, a total of £8.70 will be deducted from your payments. In other similar stories, DWP confirms new Winter Fuel Payment deadline with pensioners urged to act now.

Few people are fully aware of what constitutes savings or capital in the DWP's calculations. For Universal Credit, it includes cash, any savings accounts, property you own but don't live in, cryptoassets, inheritance payments and even money that belongs to someone else but is in your name, reports Birmingham Live.
Your personal possessions are not taken into account, though, the DWP guidelines on its website confirms. Some types of money, savings, investments or other assets might not affect your claim for Universal Credit. Nonetheless, you still need to tell us about these so we can decide whether to take them off your overall money, savings and investments.
All money, savings and investments you have in the UK and abroad are taken into account, including cash and money in your bank account, including your main bank account.
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) takes into account a wide range of financial assets. This includes current accounts, digital-only accounts such as PayPal, and various types of savings accounts: bank, building society, credit union, Help to Save, Post Office, and National Savings and Investments (NSandI) accounts.
It also considers savings held in your name for children, money that belongs to someone else but is in your name, savings set aside for essential building work (unless it's from a grant or loan), and funds saved for medical care. Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) are also included: cash, stocks and shares, Innovative Finance, Help to Buy, and Lifetime ISAs.
Other financial assets taken into account include Premium Bonds, dividends, stocks and shares, and crypto assets. The DWP also considers property you own but do not live in, property, land and savings held abroad, inheritance payments, business accounts, and assets from businesses that closed over 6 months ago.
Money held in trust funds is also considered, except in certain circumstances. Finally, the DWP takes into account unspent benefits, such as Child Benefit, Personal Independence Payment (PIP), and Disability Living Allowance (DLA), as well as any unspent income.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Large families to gain £20,000 if two-child benefit cap scrapped
Large families to gain £20,000 if two-child benefit cap scrapped

Times

time43 minutes ago

  • Times

Large families to gain £20,000 if two-child benefit cap scrapped

Tens of thousands of large families stand to gain thousands of pounds a year if ministers press ahead with abolishing the two-child benefit cap, official figures show. More than 70,000 families will receive more than £18,000 a year in child benefits if ministers take a step that Labour MPs insist is essential to fighting poverty. Some of the biggest families would be more than £20,000 better off than under the current system. The two-child cap on benefits was introduced by the Conservatives. It means that parents cannot claim universal credit payments worth about £300 a month for more than two of their children. Sir Keir Starmer is attempting to focus his government on 'fairness', and many of his backbenchers believe the cap is deeply unfair to children growing up in poverty. But in a battle to define the idea, Conservatives say it is unfair to hand packages to families on benefits that are worth more than the minimum wage when other taxpayers cannot afford to have more children. The prime minister is looking for ways to find the £3.5 billion needed to abolish the two-child benefit cap, a move which is backed by the vast majority of Labour MPs and most of the cabinet. Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, is considering pleas from Gordon Brown to increase gambling levies in order to fund a move that would lift about half a million children out of poverty. Nigel Farage has also said that Reform UK would lift the cap to encourage British families to have more children, leaving the Conservatives isolated in their insistence that the policy is essential to control the welfare bill and to ensure the benefits system is fair to taxpayers. The two-child benefit cap bars families from claiming the £292.81-a-month child element of Universal Credit for third or subsequent children born after April 6, 2017. Official figures show there are 71,580 families with five or more children on Universal Credit that stand to benefit significantly from abolishing the cap, each becoming eligible for at least £18,122.88 a year. This includes 14,899 families with six children, 4,812 with seven children, 1,822 with eight children and 668 with nine children, according to data released in answer to a parliamentary question. There are also 424 families with ten or more children who without the cap would be eligible for child Universal Credit payments worth more than £35,000, in addition to other benefits. Exactly how much each family stands to gain depends on when their children were born. Helen Whately, the shadow work and pensions secretary, said: 'Without a cap, Labour will end up giving households thousands of pounds in extra benefits — a top-up worth more than a year's full-time pay on the minimum wage. Not only is this unaffordable, it's also unfair. If you're in work you don't get extra pay for another child, so it doesn't make sense for parents on benefits to get more.' She added: 'Working people shouldn't see their taxes go up to fund uncapped payouts to others who've opted out of work but opted in to multiple children.' After Starmer was forced to abandon plans to rein in sickness benefit spending after a backbench rebellion, Whately added: 'Starmer's Britain is living beyond its means. He needs to stand firm against the pressure from his backbenchers and make the firm but fair choices to get welfare costs under control.' But Alison Garnham, the chief executive of the Child Poverty Action Group, said that 'the evidence shows the two-child limit does not affect parents' decisions about family size'. She pointed out that only 2 per cent of families on benefits had five or more children, arguing it was 'poor policy' to focus on extreme cases. 'Clearly for these households, money does not drive decisions about family size since the vast majority are only receiving UC support for two children,' she said. About 4.5 million children currently live in relative poverty, a figure that rose 100,000 last year, and Garnham said: 'The two-child limit is the biggest driver of rising child poverty and scrapping it is the most cost-effective way to reverse the increase. Giving all children the best start in life will be impossible unless the government abolishes the policy in its autumn child poverty strategy.' A government spokesman said: 'Every child — no matter their background — deserves the best start in life. That's why our child poverty taskforce will publish an ambitious strategy to tackle the structural and root causes of child poverty, and in the meantime we are investing £500 million in children's development and ensuring the poorest children don't go hungry in the holidays through a new £1 billion crisis support package.'

DWP gives major update over huge State Pension change
DWP gives major update over huge State Pension change

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

DWP gives major update over huge State Pension change

The Department for Work and Pensions is calling for evidence as it prepares for a review of the state pension age, which could see a huge change to the current system The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has issued a significant update regarding a radical change to the State Pension. The DWP has initiated a call for evidence as it considers raising the state pension age for older people. ‌ According to the DWP: "The Pensions Act 2014 requires the government to review State Pension age at least every six years. Dr Suzy Morrissey has been appointed by the Department for Work and Pensions Secretary of State to prepare an independent report ahead of the third review of State Pension age. ‌ "This independent report must explore the key factors government should consider in determining State Pension age for future decades." This includes the potential benefits of linking State Pension age to life expectancy, the DWP added. It comes as the DWP confirms a new Winter Fuel Payment deadline with pensioners urged to act now. ‌ The DWP stated that this Call for Evidence is seeking views and evidence on these areas, as it launched the call out for viewpoints on Monday, August 18. The DWP further stated: " Dr Suzy Morrissey is keen to hear views from a broad range of organisations, experts and individuals, including those who have an interest in the wider social and economic impacts of an ageing society." The terms of reference for the independent report for the third review of the State Pension age can be found on the DWP website, reports Birmingham Live. ‌ The role of State Pension age in managing the long-term sustainability of the State Pension and the international experience of Automatic Adjustment Mechanisms for making decisions about State Pension age will also be examined. You can also delve into the first and second State Pension age reviews for more information. Responses can be sent via email to or by post to the DWP. Letters should be addressed to: State Pension Age Review – Independent report 2nd Floor, Caxton House Tothill Street London SW1H 9NA. How to check your State Pension age online Your State Pension age is the earliest age at which you can begin receiving your State Pension. It might differ from the age at which you can receive a workplace or personal pension. The online tool at allows anyone of any age to check their State Pension age, an essential step in planning for retirement. You can use the State Pension age tool to check:

Four million households to receive annual income boost worth more than £700
Four million households to receive annual income boost worth more than £700

Wales Online

time2 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Four million households to receive annual income boost worth more than £700

Four million households to receive annual income boost worth more than £700 The Universal Credit Bill will see the Universal Credit standard allowance permanently rise above inflation, amounting to 725 by 2029/30 in cash terms for a single person aged 25 or over More than four million households will benefit from an annual income boost estimated to be valued at £725 under new reforms (Image: John Lamb via Getty Images) The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has announced that nearly four million households are set to receive an annual income boost estimated at £725, following the progression of a Bill designed to overhaul the welfare system through parliament. ‌ The Universal Credit Bill aims to rebalance the core payment and health top-up in Universal Credit. The legislation will result in the Universal Credit standard allowance permanently rising above inflation, equating to a cash increase of £725 by 2029/30 for a single person aged 25 or over. ‌ According to the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), this represents the highest permanent real terms increase to the main rate of out-of-work support since 1980. For money-saving tips, sign up to our Money newsletter here . ‌ What the Universal Credit Bill means The DWP has stated that the Universal Credit Bill will address the "fundamental imbalance in the system which creates perverse incentives that drive people into dependency." For money-saving tips, sign up to our Money newsletter here This will be done through: Increasing the Universal Credit standard allowance above inflation for the next four years - worth an estimated £725 by 2029/30 for a single adult aged 25 or over. Reducing the health top-up for new claims to £50 per week from April 2026. Ensuring that all existing recipients of the Universal Credit health element - and any new claimant meeting the Severe Conditions Criteria and/or that has their claims considered under the Special Rules for End of Life (SREL) - will receive the higher Universal Credit health payment after April 2026. Exemptions from reassessment for those with the most severe, lifelong conditions. Article continues below Following the summer recess next month, the Bill will be introduced into the House of Lords to continue its passage through Parliament towards Royal Assent, reports the Daily Record. In addition to these changes, the DWP has unveiled significant new measures, granting individuals receiving health and disability benefits the right to try work without fear of reassessment. The fresh 'Right to Try Guarantee' encompasses individuals with disabilities or health conditions - including those recuperating from illness - who wish to re-enter employment now that their wellbeing has enhanced. ‌ Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall recently stated: "Our reforms are built on the principle of fairness, fixing a system that for too long has left people trapped in a cycle of dependence. "We are giving extra support to millions of households across the country, while offering disabled people the chance to work without fear of the repercussions if things don't work out. "These reforms will change the lives of people across the country, so they have a real chance for a better future." ‌ The legislation also outlines provisions to safeguard the most vulnerable and severely disabled, including 200,000 within the Severe Conditions Criteria group - people with the most serious, lifelong conditions who are unlikely to recover - will not be summoned for a Universal Credit reassessment. All current recipients of the Universal Credit health element and new claimants with 12 months or less to live or who satisfy the Severe Conditions Criteria will also witness their standard allowance combined with their Universal Credit health element increase at least in line with inflation every year from 2026/27 to 2029/30. The DWP commented: "This means they can live with dignity and security, knowing the reforms to the welfare system mean it will always be there to support them." ‌ The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is placing disabled individuals at the forefront of a ministerial review of the Personal Independence Payment (PIP) assessment. This review, led by Disability Minister Sir Stephen Timms, will be co-produced with disabled people, their representative organisations, experts, MPs and other stakeholders to ensure it is fair and future-proof. The DWP stated: "We will be engaging widely over the summer to design the process for the review and consider how it can best be co-produced to ensure that expertise from a range of different perspectives is drawn upon. "These reforms are underpinned by a major investment in employment support for sick and disabled people - worth £3.8 billion over the Parliament. Funding will be brought forward for tailored employment, health and skills support to help disabled people and those with health conditions get into work as part of our Pathways to Work guarantee." ‌ The DWP further added: "This investment will accelerate the pace of new investments in employment support programmes, building on and learning from successes such as the Connect to Work programme, which are already rolling out to provide disabled people and people with health conditions with one-to-one support at the point when they feel ready to work." Thomas Lawson, CEO of Turn2us, commented: "MPs voted to reduce support for people unable to work by over £200 a month. Halving the health element of Universal Credit for anyone who becomes sick from April 2026 will increase hardship and mean even more people are going without essentials. "To build a system we can all trust, the government now needs to review the whole system and really listen to disabled people and organisations like ours. In a country as wealthy as ours, sickness should never mean hunger or eviction." Article continues below

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store