The BBC has reported that only one in twenty claimants who are eligible for social tariff broadband have actually signed up, with 4.3 million potentially eligible people apparently missing out. We’d like to hear about your experience if you’ve signed up for social tariff broadband or what made you decide against it.

Claimants on a range of benefits are eligible for social tariff broadband deals.

All the major suppliers offer a cheaper deal if you are on Universal Credit, Pension Credit, Employment and Support Allowance, Jobseeker’s Allowance or Income Support.

Some also extend their offer to PIP claimants.

Prices range from £10 to £20 a month with speeds from 15 to 100 Mbits, depending on the supplier.

The Ofcom website has a full list of suppliers and prices, with links to their individual terms and conditions.

Citizens Advice estimates that one million people have cancelled their broadband in the last year because of the cost of living, with UC claimants 12 times more likely to have done so than non-claimants.

Yet social tariff deals are not proving popular and Citizens Advice wants Ofcom to "hold firms' feet to the fire" to improve their take-up.

But is it just lack of awareness of these schemes that is holding people back? Or is it that mobile phones are a necessity while home broadband is an unaffordable luxury for many claimants, no matter how cheap the deal?

Please let us know your opinion of the scheme in the comments section.

You can read the full story on the BBC website.

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    Stuart Allcoat · 1 years ago
    I’ve been calling for the last three weeks, as my health has deteriorated further and my needs for mobility have indeed increased. All I want it to update PIP with these changes and I would like further help. Do they not realize when your world has been turned upside down and your not able to provide for yourself or you’re family. The undue stress this causes now being reliant on benefits that could stop at any time thus the realization of your worth after 45 years paying into the system is absolutely Zero! I just need to talk to someone…………My illness has come at a bit of a shock (understatement). Constant joint and muscle pain, stiffness, chronic fatigue for the last 4 years just to mention a few ailments of my Chronic Autoimmune Disease…I’m at my whits end…
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Mrs W · 1 years ago
    I have contacted my MP’s office and here’s a template for others if you wish to use it.
    At the bottom of this article you can see all the options to share this newsletter, I chose the email option and wrote:-
    I am very worried for my disabled son when the time comes to migrate over from pips to UC . This website which I receive monthly news letters is asking it’s readers to contact their MP to highlight the lack of staff answering the helpline. Leading to having their benefits stopped.

    The DWP plan to migrate 2.5 million claimants over the course of 2024. Many of them will have severe health issues which will make completing the process very challenging and they may well need an extension.

    What chance will they have of successfully making the request unless the DWP invests massive new resources in call centre staff and facilities.

    https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/dwp-call-centres-will-cause-life-threatening-destitution

    Thank you
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    DianaW · 1 years ago
    Requiring claimants who need an extension of time to reach the helpline by telephone is wrong in principle.
    The helpline should have a well-publicised e-mail address - not just an online claim form which  doesn't enable the user to keep a copy of their communication - that claimants can use to put their case for an extension. As long as the request is appropriately detailed, it isn't essential that it be answered immediately. Having once done so, they can then prove the request by reference to their own copy of that message.
    It's much easier for a claimant to use, or find support to use, e-mail than it is for them to be forced to spend long periods waiting to get through - often unsuccessfully - by telephone.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Rosie Jackson · 1 years ago
    It's not just a question of getting through to speak to an actual person - it is also vital to get through to someone in the "right" call centre. By that I mean a call centre that has complete access to your records. On so many occasions I have spoken to people who have restricted access to my records; some can only say "we've got your letter" while others can say " we've replied" but not what that reply actually says! I've also spoken to call handlers who had no idea what the DWP's own abbreviations mean (e.g. when I got a letter cancelling the DIG component of my claim and was asked "what's DIG?"). 
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    Sally · 1 years ago
    It seems to me the DWP and the government want to deliberately make life as hard as possible for disabled people. It begs the question are they hoping lots of us die! If challenged on that opinion we all know they would lie. Such a shame the UN has no real power (I read somewhere ages ago that the UN are basically disgusted at the DWP and government treatment of disabled people) to force the DWP etc to stop attacking us. 

    May I suggest for those with access to a mobile phone download an app called WeQ4U, it will call whatever number you require and will stay in the queue for you - as I’m not explaining this very well a clearer explanation can be found on the internet. Hopefully it can go some way to alleviating the stress of just sitting there constantly in the vain hope someone will answer your call.  
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    ward · 1 years ago
    1) If you cant get through on phone ,Go to nearest JCP within 7 day
    2)When you get appt with work coach, take your documents and Fit note within 28days to JCP,do not use verify as it shite
    Then your claim will be live and you can apply for advance should you need to
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Steveyboy · 1 years ago
    Speaking from experience the welfare of those calling DWP helplines is of no interest to the Conservative government whatsoever. The call centres are run like a private company where statistics and justification for existence are king and the dividends are paid to right wing tory shareholders in the form of satisfaction  that life is being made as difficult as possible for the people they despise but are obliged to pay lip service to helping.
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    Mike · 1 years ago
    A total joke from start to non finish ,loads of different numbers,loads or different options hours sat waiting to receive an answer, they'll all be ' working from home',ie watching Netflix while eating hobnobs!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Harry · 1 years ago
    Mel Stride has already said that he's determined to get Long term Sick back to work (Please see recent Disability News Service article) and by using this method mentioned above ie difficulty in migration; as well as using other nefarious methods, he will aim to accomplish this.
    Please therefore try to prepare as much as possible.I am fully aware this can be very difficult sadly as always we have a fight on our hands.
    Just remember if you are long term sick and your conditions have not changed and your needs are the same.
    The DWP have to give excellent reasons why you can now do any form of work
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      cazcomps · 1 years ago
      @Harry Even if they have to give reasons why you can now do any form of work, they sadly don't have to give excellent reasons why they have suspended or even stopped your money.  I honestly believe they are hoping people die from illness/stress or poverty thus clearing numbers from the books.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Harry · 1 years ago
    Mel Stride has already said that he's determined to get Long term Sick back to work (Please see recent Disability News Service article) and by using this method mentioned above ie difficulty in migration; as well as using other nefarious methods, he will aim to  accomplish this.
    Please therefore try to prepare as much as possible.I am fully aware this can be  very difficult sadly as always  we have a fight on our hands.
    Just remember if you are long term sick and your conditions have not changed and your needs are the same.
    The DWP have to give excellent reasons why you can now do any form of work
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Aw · 1 years ago
    It is a feature of my MH that I am unable to use the phone. Does anyone know what I do? I also do not have a passport so does this mean I am going to be stuck? I hate this, I told Neil Cooling several times on Twitter that I am simply unable to cope with the pressures of UC and he just didn't seem to understand it at all. They just don't care that there are so many people who can't do this.  What on earth is going to happen to us all?