DWP disability minister Stephen Timms is still desperately trying to hide the truth about pension age PIP claims.  But his answers to an MP’s written questions make it clear that pension age PIP claimants will be subject to the four point rule, no matter how hard the DWP tried to hide that fact. 

From November 2026, Labour proposes that PIP claimants will not be eligible for the daily living component unless they score 4 points or more in at least one activity.

Whenever challenged about the harshness of this rule, the DWP falls back on the assertion that it will encourage claimants with less severe conditions to seek work – in spite of PIP being available to disabled claimants regardless of their employment status.

However, even this spurious justification falls apart if the 4 point rule is applied to pension age claimants, who nobody expects to start looking for work if their PIP is taken from them.

So, up until now, the DWP have repeatedly used a particular form of words to cover the fact that there is no exemption for pension age claimants:  “In keeping with existing policy, people of state pension age are not routinely fully reviewed and will not be affected by these changes.”

It is the case that pension age PIP claimants are supposed to only be subject to a light touch review every ten years.  But a light touch review is still a review and must apply the existing law.

And, as we have pointed out, currently more than 10,000 pension age PIP claimants have a planned award review every year and 20,000 more request a change of circumstances review because their needs have increased.

So, unless they are exempt from the 4 point rule, they risk losing their award if they do not score 4 points or more for any activity.

To try to get the DWP to admit this truth, on 6 May we asked readers to ask their MPs to put two written questions to the secretary of state for work and pensions.  The questions were:

“Will existing PIP claimants of pension age who are subject to a planned award review from November 2026 be required to score at least four points in one daily living activity in order to maintain their award?”

“Will existing PIP claimants of pension age who request a change of circumstances review from November 2026 be required to score at least four points in one daily living activity in order to maintain or increase their award?”

On 8 May Conservative MP Alicia Kearns kindly asked those questions and Timms replied on 16 May.

The responses only needed to be a simple “Yes they will” or “No they won’t”.

Instead, Timms fell back once again on the “not routinely fully reviewed” form of words, but then added:

“All claimants are required to notify the Department of any change to their circumstance, be that an improvement or deterioration in their needs. Upon notification of a change, a Case Manager will consider what further action might be required to ensure the claimant is receiving the correct level of support.”

It is a carefully crafted politician’s answer, designed to obscure the truth without telling an outright lie.

But a case manager considering “what further action might be required to ensure the claimant is receiving the correct level of support” is exactly what happens whenever any PIP claimant requests a change of circumstances review.  Either the case manager will request an assessment of the claimant by the Health Assessment Advisory Service and then make a decision or they will make a decision on the claim using the available evidence, possibly after contacting the claimant and the claimant’s own health professionals.

The decision will be based on the law as it stands at the time and, because Labour are not exempting pension age PIP claimants from the 4 point rule, that is the law that will be applied.

So, if a pension age claimant asks for a change of circumstances review with the aim of moving from standard to enhanced PIP then, unless they are assessed as scoring four points or more for one activity, they will lose their daily living award entirely.

That is the truth that Timms is desperately trying to hide with his politician’s answer.

A much smaller proportion of pension age claimants are likely to be affected by Labour’s proposed change than working age claimants, but some will still be hit. Both pension age claimants and MPs, who will be required to vote on these proposals, have a right to be told that in plain language.

When he became disability minister, Timms claimed that he would create a new era of transparency at the DWP, as part of an effort to restore trust in the department.

But it turns out that being transparent – or trustworthy - is entirely incompatible with being a DWP minister.

You can read the full answers to the written questions here and here

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 21 days ago
    Thank you to B&W for this. Please could I ask that this be given to the mainstream media? I will ‘again’ contact my MP but the media can maybe help by keeping this front and centre in the news. Much of their blurb is just rehashed old stuff so having this from a respected support service such as B&W would give it more credence. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 21 days ago
    More in the news about the government rethinking winter fuel- which, although vital for many, pales in comparison to the level of cuts hundreds of thousands  will face if these wider welfare proposals become law. This cheaper option is another attempted trick from Labour to buy their way back into favour. I hope people won’t be blinded to the wider issue. 

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/17/no-10-steps-up-review-of-winter-fuel-payment-cut-amid-unpopularity-with-voters
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 days ago
      @Gingin My understanding is that once the WCA is abolished in 2028 there will be no rights for disabled or chronically unwell people at all. The WCA is the only legal protection there is out there for us. This is why the DWP wants to abolish it in the guise of merging it with the PIP assessment. However, nothing I've read to date seems to acknowledge any of this in the media etc. I think this is what should be the main focus. The DWP were actively piloting prior and during Covid19 using their own in house doctors for health assessments for PIP in postcodes in London. The DWP also want to move away from a GP signing you off as to ill to work but are unable to do this until the WCA is abolished. The DWP are renowned for making non-legislitative changes on PIP to reduce welfare costs until they are taken to task by a court case that wins only to have to then back track to the date of the court case on all PIP claims where they have not applied the law correctly. The current letters they then send to claimants are ambiguous to say the least about why the DWP did not apply the correct law to their claim and cause even more confusion for claimants and do not guarantee that the claimant is in a position to get any back pay due to the failure to explain in layman's terms where the DWP went wrong. Please can Benefits and Work do more investigation into the WCA and the effect of what will happen once its abolished Ty
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 20 days ago
      @Barney boy @Barney boy it's just a complete shambles. This guy who professes to have true Labour values has nothing of the sort. He is basically a shoddy crook, a millionaire like many of his colleagues, who sees us as an obstacle to overcome rather than to support. Disingenuous does not even begin to cover it.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @James Agreed. In a big way. But surely this should inspire us to fight harder. If we do not, there is a downwards staircase. We all EARNED the right to support. It is time to fight.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @Gingin It’s so
      Notable the radio and news programs are only mentioning that starmer may U turn on the heating allowance. They have been told to do 
      Most likely and see if they get away with it. Yes it’s the cheaper option but mr starmer doesn’t realise that only u turning on that and not the benefit reforms isn’t gonna cut it. Nobody trusts starmer now even he u  turned on both matters. The very fact he was willing to even try and slide this green paper through shows he will stoop to any low to protect his own position. 
      Even the wake up call at the council elections doesn’t seem to have set in yet with him. 
      If he doesn’t u turn on both these matters I have more chance of being prime minister at the next election. So now they are gonna  give £300 back to pensioners and take it of them elsewhere. Do they really think we are that stupid we cannot see what their game is. We may be disabled that doesn’t make us stupid. 
      With starmers actions I find myself politically homeless and if his reforms happen I may be actually homeless also. 
      It’s time the people and the
      Mp, s that have any sense of decency stood up to this brutal victimisation of the weakest in society. What happened those with the broadest shoulders will bare the greatest load kier?
      Anyone one impacted by this brutality don’t give in and challenge them through every legal avenue available to you. They know some folk will give up as they are too tired to fight. It’s time to put party politics aside and stand together against these cuts. What’s next if they get away with this is it going to be concentration camps or wear stickers showing we are disabled so society can judge us without walking a day in our shoes. 

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @Gingin These are horse trading tactics and I would not fall for it as they will still hit the sick and disabled hard. I hope people do not fall for this trick as many more will be many more to divert attention away and mislead people and mps.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 21 days ago
    Another example of the Blessed Stephen's Christianity at work.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 21 days ago
    Thank you benefits and work. This is an area of great subterfuge by Stephen Timms and the Labour government. Pensioners will be subject to removal of their pip care element under the 4 point rule when being reviewed and that they are also expected to work perhaps through hardship imposed upon them that will induce a behavioural change in them even though they will be past working age and they will have disabilities. This is a very dark picture for all pensioners who may even end up becoming homeless as the care element of pip is a passport benefit for housing benefit. The words of this man and government simply do not measure up to the truth of what they are doing as they hit young and old who are disabled in one of the most devious underhand and deceptive way
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 21 days ago
    This is crooked and wicked, but not shocking or even surprising. I hope MPs can be enlightened before they vote. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 20 days ago
      @Yorkie Bard What is the x handle for SLB please? 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @Gingin Gingin, I wonder if SLB might include a few words about this in his X missive?

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