PIP impact assessment

A PIP impact assessment has now been published.


UC rates

The Bill provides for above inflation increases in the standard rate of UC, from 2.3% above inflation in 2026/27 to 4.8% above inflation in 2029/30.

However, the LCWRA rate will be frozen from 2026/27 to 2029/30.

The LCWRA element rates for the 2026/27 tax year will be:

  • pre-2026 claimant  £423.27
  • severe conditions criteria claimant  £423.27
  • claimant who is terminally ill  £423.27
  • any other claimant with limited capability for work and work-related activity £217.26
Severe conditions criteria - no private doctor diagnoses allowed.

The Bill provides that claimants who meet the severe conditions criteria for UC will never have to have another reassessment and will be paid the higher rate of UC health element of £97 per week.

The criteria are essentially the descriptors for being found to have LCWRA for UC - we cover this in more detail in "How the severe conditions criteria work" on this page - with four further requirement:

  • The individual’s level of function will always meet LCWRA
  • The individual’s condition will last for the rest of their life
  • There is no realistic prospect of recovery of function, and
  • The condition has been diagnosed by an appropriately qualified healthcare professional in the course of the provision of NHS services.

That last bullet appears to mean that an adult living in an area where they will have to wait literally years for an NHS assessment of say ADHD or autism will not be able to pay for a private assessment and have that accepted for the purpose of getting the higher rate of UC health element.


"one of the most generous ever"

The DWP press release boasts that:

"The Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill will provide 13-weeks of additional financial security to existing claimants affected by changes to the PIP daily living component, including those who their lose eligibility to Carers Allowance and the carer’s element of Universal Credit.

"The 13-week additional protection will give people who will be affected by the changes time to adapt, access new, tailored employment support, and plan for their future once they are reassessed and their entitlement ends.

"This transitional cover is one of the most generous ever and more than three times the length of protection provided for the transition from DLA to PIP."


Press release from the DWP

The DWP have issued  a press release headed "Welfare bill will protect the most vulnerable and help households with income boost".  It quotes Liz Kendall as saying:

"This legislation represents a new social contract and marks the moment we take the road of compassion, opportunity and dignity.

"This will give people peace of mind, while also fixing our broken social security system so it supports those who can work to do so while protecting those who cannot - putting welfare spending on a more sustainable path to unlock growth as part of our Plan for Change."


PIP changes in the Bill

The 4-point rule and the 13 week run-on if you lose your PIP because of it are confirmed.  Plus a clause which could be used to allow for pension age PIP claimants to be exempt from the 4-point rule

Clause 5 deals with PIP.  

Subsection 1 confirms the requirement to:

score at least 8 points, including at least 4 points for a single daily living activity, to get an award of the standard rate;

score at least 12 points, including at least 4 points for a single daily living activity, to get an award of the enhanced rate.

In other words, the 4-point rule.

Paragraph 6 (c) confirms that PIP will be payable for 13 weeks after a decision that you are no longer entitled to PIP daily living component as a result of failing the 4-point rule.

Subsection 2 says that the secretary of state (SoS) will decide the date on which the new rules begin.  The explanatory notes add that this is intended to be November 2026.  The change will not apply to any given claimant until their award is reassessed.  So for claimants with longer awards it may be some years distant - by which time there may be an entirely new PIP test.

Subsection 4 appears to be a "get-out clause" to allow the SoS to make special provisions for particular groups of people.  They almost certainly have pension age PIP claimants in mind here.  The paragraph actually says:

"to make different provision for different cases or purposes (including different provision for persons of different ages);"

So, for example, it might allow the SoS to decide that the 4-point rule will never apply to any person at or over pension age, who is already in receipt of PIP daily living in November 2026.   This would give pension age claimants an exemption, but it's interesting that this is not being put into the Act itself.

The subsection also allows the secretary of state to provide for "a person to exercise discretion in dealing with any matter".  

 

Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill published

The bill has now been published.  You can download the 22 page .pdf document from the Get file link on this page.

Or you can download the file directly from this link

You can download the explanatory notes from this page

There's also an impact assessment on the Universal Credit Rebalancing from the Department for Work and Pensions - May 2025


Money Bill

There has been discussion about whether Labour will seek to have this bill designated as a money bill, which would effectively remove House of Lords scrutiny.  A decision about whether a bill is a money bill is made by the Speaker of the House, after the report stage.  However, according to guidance on Money Bills from the Office of the Parliamentary Counsel: 

1.35 During the debates in 1911 it was alleged to be a defect in the bill that the Speaker was not required to make his decision earlier because of the risk of the Commons proceedings being completed in ignorance of whether the bill was to be certified. There is now an informal indication, published as a note when the Bill is listed on the Commons Order Paper, as to whether a bill is likely to be certified as a money bill.

The notice that the bill will be presented today on the Order Paper makes no mention of a money bill, so this seems to be an indication - though not a certainty - that Labour are not pursuing this possibility.


Bill due this afternoon

The Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill is due to be published this afternoon.  This is the bill that will enable the introduction of the PIP 4-point rule and cuts to universal credit for disabled claimants.

We’ll provides links, analysis and the opportunity for you to comment on this page.

According to the UK parliament website, it is a:  "Bill to make provision to alter the rates of the standard allowance, limited capability for work element and limited capability for work and work-related activity element of universal credit and the rates of income-related employment and support allowance, and to restrict eligibility for the personal independence payment."

 

 

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    Labour are threatening to kick the rebels out of the party if they don't vote the cuts through 
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      · 3 hours ago
      @Jj Not really a credible threat when the rebellion is this large. Even if they followed through the government would look ridiculous and it would create a great deal of festering animosity on the backbenches. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Jj Good!!, then they can join up and start a new party that we can trust to be on our side. if i were 'the rebels' i would not hang around waiting to be kicked out, i'd be resigning even if the cuts dont go through, Labour are done.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Jj Would that matter? Labour are finished regardless. I'm starting to think that we're fighting a losing battle. We'll just have to keep fighting on against these proposals.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    My MP for Crewe & Nantwich (South Cheshire)followed the Labour line and support for the bill, saying he believed people were better off working and they should be helped into work.  My assumption is that once in work you will get little  no benefits from PIP no matter what your condition.  The disadvantages in work and getting a job in the first place are great, and not all employers are either towing the line or even following laws anyway on 'reasonable adjustments'. I have seen two colleagues dismissed not for their disability, but for capability as they could not face work every day, and no allowance could be made to accommodate that. To say that work compensates for disability is wrong, and the small amount that many receive in PIP is very welcome in a tough economic world.  I expect to lose my PIP, which I have had since 2008, as I score standard for both components, but have significant mobility issues.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Jonathan I'm at the start of the grievance procedure about my manager's poor communication when dealing with me.  It'll probably end up with the lawyers.  Labour are blind to think this is going to save money, or their parliamentary seats: it won't.  I hope the two people you mentioned took the company to a tribunal. We'll be doing a lot of that when the changes come in.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Jonathan Yes, exactly, show me an employer who will happily say, "Oh no problem, just ring each morning and let me know if you can come into work today" I would love to go back to work. Still, the reality is I am unemployable as I have no idea what tomorrow will be like until we get to tomorrow, and Spinal Cord Injuries affect not just the injury site, but all kinds of things your body does.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    So scared and terrified what this guv are going to push me to.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 hours ago
      @Angel Same, I'm hanging on by a thread.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    Aged 77 and 80, Disabled since 1985. No works pension to speak of. If this goes through we'll lose our house.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Di Do not worry it will not make any difference to your payments.People in their 60s still to get to pension age are extremely worried, as are all other working age groups.The last thing Starmer and Co want is pensioners losing their homes!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Di Really sorry to hear that, I hope this horrible punitive cut fails. 
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    · 10 hours ago
    This government does not care about disabled people full stop pip is very hard to claim in the first place as the agenda is to stop people from getting it I know as it took near to six years to get it they throw everything in the way to stop you it's particularly calling when you've served the country and been left disabled that's why we must fight this government because it is unjust to pick on the Vunrebale
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    From dr Rebecca on twitter:

    “I'm told MPs are combing through social media to gauge public reaction to the proposed welfare cuts and the potential backlash ahead of the debate later today. So make your voices heard. ✊ And if you see any Labour MPs against these cuts, retweet and like. 🫡”
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    What is happening with LCWRA… no one on here seems to discuss that. 
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      · 9 hours ago
      @H I've thought this too. I don't work because of chronic illness. I was on ESA and always won my reviews on the basis that working or taking part in work related activity would make me more ill. 
      My health worsened after being made homeless and my abusive council shouting at me and telling me I wasn't too ill to sleep rough. I developed a pain disorder because of it. I'm 90% housebound and lost all my pleasures in life.
      3 years on I was starting to rebuild my life and the stress of these plans has already made me relapse. The stress of having to apply for umpteen jobs a week and the fear of sanctions and having to physically push myself too far will worsen my health further. I'll be homeless again anyway because rent is too high. I suffer severe mental illness too but NHS don't consider me suicidal enough to offer me any support and told me to seek private treatment after implying I was being entitled. All of which means no one else has to consider me vulnerable. 

      There are undoubtedly thousands like me and people worse off.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @H @H. From April 2026 payment amounts are being frozen for existing claimants and halved for new claimants. Also, WCA is being scrapped and eligibility/reassessments for LCWRA (soon to be renamed UC Helath Element) will be linked to the new 4 point PIP assessment. So if you fail the new PIP scoring criteria not only will you lose PIP but also LCWRA and any associated carer's allowance. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @H LCWRA and Carers Allowance will be lost at the same time if you lose PIP under the new rules, as far as I understand. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    What happens if you are on old age pension how will it affect pip.
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      · 8 hours ago
      @Ellen My review wasn’t due until 2028 5 years grace of what I call torture, I fall short by 1 point. Was also bullied into the UC migration unable to work mentally and physically damaged! Was unaware UC would be effected but does this mean you will also loose your housing benefits? If so that means homeless for a lot of people ?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @David Pickin @David Pickin. You will lose PIP if you fail the new 4 point scoring criteria at your next reassessment, this is regardless of whether you can or cannot secure work.
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      · 10 hours ago
      @David Pickin If you claimed pip before retirement and you are on the enhanced payments & very disabled with a light touch 10 year review you will likely have the 4 points in the daily living component. I doubt very much if you would be affected apart from satisfying the 10 year review. If you are on the lower payments with more frequent reviews then I don't know. Sorry. You might be able to claim attendance allowance if pip withdrawn. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    As a disabled pensioner relying on PIP to maintain independence I'm sick to my core that people like me are no longer protected.  I can't possibly go back to work, not should I have to. I've done my time and paid my dues. Labour are making it clear that people who can't work due to age and disability have no value to them. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    Re : Money Bill, Hoyle has shown he will not stand up to the Leadership and in previous cases it can be declared at the point it enters the Lords or at Ping Pong.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    Just now at PMQs, Angela Rayner has finally definitively nailed her colours to the mast. A despicable display of toeing the party line and parroting the usual mealy-mouthed platitudes.
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      · 34 minutes ago
      @wibblum
      What a disappointment she has turned out to be. Join Starmer's cabinet and don't forget to leave your soul at the door.

      There have been reports that the whips are worried about the possibility of ministerial resignations (though presumably not at cabinet level). It will be interesting to see if Jess Phillips is one of them. If she votes for the cuts and they go through then I hope she will have the decency to read out the names of all those who die as a result on the floor of the Commons as she has with victims of domestic abuse.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 hours ago
      @MSH And her son 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @wibblum That 'woman' has completely forgotten where she came from.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @wibblum
      The people who believed she was "one of us" have been led up the garden path.
      She's a snake.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    I have enhanced PIP on both elements and I have a motability vehicle.

     I was receiving tax credits but was then moved to UC, for which I was then refused as I received spousal maintenance as part of my divorce settlement. 

    If I work, my spousal maintenance is reduced pound for pound in accordance with my wage.


    If PIP is cut, I am forced to work, and possibly could lose my car. this will affect so much, both mentally and physically I have MS and stress is simply the worst.

    I am so worried.


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 hours ago
      @Vickki But if you have enhanced for both with no score of 4 you will still suffer? 
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      · 9 hours ago
      @Lisa The way I understand it is this; you and I will both retain our Enhanced Mobility. Anyone on Enhanced Living will retain it. Those like me on Standard Living who do not score 4 points in any one section will lose Standard Living. So as it stands that's me scuppered. My 11 points across all sections in Living will not count because I don't score 4 points. Which then means loss of Carers Allowance too. My husband does Everything for me. I can't work out whether it's worth him applying for it, to lose it in 3 years time. The DWP have ignored so much of my evidence it's unreal. They even evidenced they've ignored in their summing up. They've ignored the Light Touch for on going disability the Tories said was starting last August. What really riles me is I cannot ever work again and I have a letter from NHS Pension department telling me this. From an independent to me, Government Dr. But because that letter is from 2017 and I applied for PIP in 2021 it was 'too old!' How? It doesn't change and my spine isn't going to grow back better. I was  Nurse and fell at work. Tripped by a patient. My MP was patronising when I emailed him when all this was proposed.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    I am in the middle of the forced transfer to UC. I have an incomplete C4 to T1 SCI and am so stressed I'm not sleeping, pain level is way up. I only find out on Monday what my first payment will be on Friday which is not time to fix it if they screw it up as we have to use this silly journal system and even my Doctor says I am unemployable as I have no idea what tomorrow will be like till tomorrow.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 hours ago
      @David I know how you feel!I've just finished my migration to UC and last month I had my pip review (6 months early!) forms to fill out out!I made my mental health much worse .
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    I have just had to complete a PIP renewal form even though my award is not ending until January 2026. Does this mean my application will be targeted with the new rules they are trying to bring in ?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 hours ago
      @Mike Hooper Hi Mike, 

      Wow! That must have come as a great shock to you. 

      Previously, did you have a 10 year ongoing/light touch review? W
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @Allyson When did you receive your receive your renewal form?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Allyson @Allyson. Because your review is before November 2026, it's assessed under the current scoring regime. The proposed 4‑point-per-activity requirement will not affect your renewal.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Allyson These things usually have a specific start date. Before that Date you should be assessed on the previous, so current criteria I'd guess.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Allyson Think it’s more likely to go in your favour by  your award being agreed sooner hopefully and extended longer  But I could only speculate. Mine is due in March next year so I’m looking more risky though if I receive a renewal soon like you might be better. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago

    I wrote to my MP in early May about the Bill and was surprised to actually receive a full response with a copy of a letter he had sent to Liz Kendall  which includes some relevant questions he posed to her. 
    He made some quite clear arguments about his constituents concerns and about the fact that he did not believe a Labour government  elected on promises of ensuring UC was at a level to reduce poverty and reliance on emergency food,  direct quote 

    "In my view, therefore, the proposed cuts to social security not only break these promises, but will also have a devastating impact on those already in precarious positions, many of whom would like to work if they had the right support.

    This is not right, and it is not the promise the Government made to the public."

    I was impressed at the amount of detail and the fact it was not a bland copy and paste auto reply.

    I can't believe how far we as a country have fallen , I have kept his reply in case it is useful to others







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    · 11 hours ago
    I have worked since 15 years old and became too ill to work at 52. I am now 62 and been pushed over to uc, I'll be 65 when my review is done,  I will be in severe poverty,  this is an attack on disabled people,  this government doesn't seem to care 💔 
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      · 10 hours ago
      @JCC Very sorry to read this.. so so many in this boat..I’m sure you explore every survival trick ..I now share a ready meal ( disabled so cooking not possible) and add stodge.. best wishes 
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    · 11 hours ago
    This is just another exercise to rail-road the vulnerable, pensioners and the disabled.
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    · 11 hours ago
    I feel sick to the bone and dread this news.  Not only are they destroying the core PIP, but along with LWRCA (UC) and Carers allowance in one massive go! This will be a huge income loss for many disabled people. So the government is happy to kick people to the gutters if they can't afford basic food and shelter.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @Joe Blogs It's LCWRA that passports to free prescriptions too. How does that fit with getting people to work? That gets people to hospital. 
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      · 10 hours ago
      @Joe Blogs I know,I'm one of those people, but it's cbesa with me,I can't claim uc because my husband has savings,I have none so I'm going to be left totally dependent on another person for survival, this is abuse in my opinion, abuse of the ability to support yourself and stay alive on you own,I really don't think they're even recognising this issue or they just don't care
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    I thought that recipients of PIP, of retirement age, will not be reassessed. Is this the case or just a rumour ? TY
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @Colin Bradley That's great Colin. It depends on what level of pip people are on as to whether they'd be better off on attendance allowance, but I'm glad it worked out for you. Really useful to know you can reinstate your pip claim in that way, thanks for that info.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Colin Bradley £79 per week is £4,108 per year. Dividend by 12 is £342.33 monthly equivalent, not £280. This is a big win for you. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Lubnaig Just a note: I've just moved from low level PIP to Attendance Allowance. £107 a month to £79 a week (£280 a month approx). A battle was had and I had to push a few buttons, was lucky as I did get to a good Team Leader eventually, I had to cancel my PIP claim but knowing I could reinstate within 12 months if I was not granted AA. I was, so feels like a bit of a win tbh.

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