We will have to wait for the publication of the Green Paper later today for full details of changes to personal Independence payment (PIP) and Universal Credit (UC).

But here are some of the main points of the speech.

Personal Independence Payment (PIP)

  • No vouchers
  • No means-test
  • No freeze.

But, from November 2026, claimants will need to score at least 4 points from a single descriptor to qualify for the daily living component of PIP, as well as scoring a total of at least 8 points..

So, if you select 4 descriptors scoring two points each, that will be 8 points, but it will not qualify for an award. 

But if you select one descriptor scoring 4 points and two descriptors scoring 2 points, that will be 8 points and you will qualify for an award.

There will also be review of the PIP assessment system led by disability minister Stephen Timms.

PIP existing claimants

The DWP says it "will work with Department of Health and Social Care to ensure that existing people who claim PIP who may no longer be entitled to the benefit following an award review under new eligibility rules have their health and eligible care needs met. The government is consulting on how best to achieve this."

This suggests that existing claimants will be subject to the new rules when their award is reviewed.

 Work Capability Assessment (WCA)

The WCA is to be scrapped in 2028 and a new single assessment system introduced. Under the new system, any extra financial support for health conditions (including PIP, ESA or UC health) will be assessed via a new single assessment which will be based on the PIP assessment – considering on the impact of disability on daily living, not on capacity to work.

There will be an increase in  Face-to-Face Assessments for PIP and the WCA.

Reintroduce reassessments for incapacity benefits, with exceptions for those who will never work and those under special rules for end-of-life care. Reassessments have largely been switched off since 2021.

A "Right To Try Guarantee" will be introduced which will guarantee that attempting work will never lead to a benefits reassessment.

Universal Credit (UC)

From April 2026, Labour will hold the value of the universal credit health top-up fixed in cash terms for existing claimants, and reduce it for new claimants, with an additional premium for people with severe lifelong condition

The Standard Allowance will be raised above inflation by 2029/30, adding £775 annually in cash terms for a single person aged over 25.

Access to the health element of Universal Credit will be delayed until a claimant is aged 22.

Existing claimants.  The DWP say “Those currently in receipt of UC health will benefit from the increased standard allowance and will not be affected by plans to reduce UC health in future.”

Assessments

People with the most severe disabilities or with health conditions that will never improve will never be reassessed.

When

The DWP say they will bring forward primary legislation this session to enable delivery of the PIP additional eligibility requirement and UC rebalancing reforms from 26/27.

The Right to Work Guarantee will be delivered through separate primary legislation which will be introduced “in due course”. 

Savings

The DWP say the changes are expected to save over £5 billion in 2029 to 2030.

Links

The Pathways to Work:  Reforming Benefits and Support to Get Britain Working Green Paper.

 Liz Kendall speech

 

 

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    A young person whom I helped, with advice from this site, to claim PIP last autumn re the impact of the bundle of disabling effects of their severe bi-polar is concerned how these reforms will impact her. Will she continue to receive PIP (Living and Mobility) as awarded until her next re-assessment as set out at the outset, or will existing claimants be subject to re-assessment brought forward? I've not been able to find clarification in the media. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    anyone know how long it will be before (any of) the proposed changes start coming into effect?  Weeks, months?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    Will be wonderful if and when you get the four points plus,are awarded pip and only get it for a year.  Back to square one. 
    Absolutely terrifying. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    So will everyone have to be reassessed or will that happen at the review stage of everyone’s claim. Also if you are on a 10yr light touch will that continue to the end or will you have to be reassessed 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    Cabinet members and their estimated worth.
    Kier Starmer £7.7 Million
    Angela Rayner £4.7 million
    Rachel Reeves £7 million
    Yvette Cooper £3 million
    Ed Millinand £8 million
    David Lammy £6 million
    Pat McFadden £8 million
    Shabana Mahmood £2 million
    Wes Streeting £3 million
    Jonathan Reynolds £14 million
    Liz Kendall (joint) £40 million
    John Healey £16 million
    Heidi Alexander £6 million
    Peter Kyle £7 million
    Hillary Benn £4 million
    Ian Murray £6 million
    Bridget Phillipson £3 million
    Lord Hermer Unknown
    Lisa Nandy £4 Million
    Sir Alan Campbell £14 million
    Darren Jones £3.5 million
    Lucy Powell £3.5 million
    Jo Stevens £10 million
    Steve Reed £4 million
    Baroness Smith £5 million
    Ellie Reeves £4 million.

    Those tempted to reach for Reform UK can be reassured that Nigel Farage has an estimated £5 million. So he'll be on your side too.

    As for the Tories. Well, we all know what they thought about disabled people.

    But, no-one was misled. Labour did promise "Change" - though no-one who voted for them quite understood the sort of Change they were voting for.

    The answer. Organise. Fight back. Challenge this rotten system.


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    Quite simply, where are all of these jobs coming from?my able bodied, uni educated 22yo daughter cannot find any positions, how on earth could I? Constant absences through neurological conditions, severe mobility issues needing specialist equipment…Employers do not choose us! 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    People saying all mental ill health will be excluded from PIP. They have tried doing this before, which the Tories did and it went to court was found to be discriminatory. That sets legal precedent. There are still clauses that cover mental health in the assessments now. Anyone who is agoraphobic, cannot engage in social contact this is covered in a descriptor. This descriptor was removed a year or two ago and put back after consultation.  I very much doubt it will be removed again. Liz Kendall can say what she wants but Mind has said to base PIP on physical disability and not mental is blatant discrimination and is against the Equality Act of 2010. 

    As it is, I will pass one of the descriptors anyway. Just repeating this as so sick of the attack on mental ill health when as said before, it can cause such suffering and is doing so for millions of people affected by all this.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 hours ago
    I am now a Pensioner (2024), I was awarded PIP 8 years ago.  I have indefinite award (3 years ago) of Daily Living + Mobility but not 4 points on one thing.  I have complex condition.  I have a small job to keep me social but rely on PIP to allow me to work. If they drop PIP I would need to claim pension credit and drop job.  So costing them more in the long run. 


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 hours ago
    No mention on people on DLA or PIP over state pension age.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @tinytim Yes, what about them?

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @tinytim Exactly the same rules.

      They are usually given a 10 year light touch award. However, the criteria to claim the daily living element, i would imagine would be consitant throughout. If you don't get 4 points on one daily living activity, then you are not entitled to the DL element.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @tinytim That’s is my concern but nothing was mentioned 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 hours ago
    Having had a read of the comments on mail online, it is very apparent that a large section of society believe many disabled people are 'scammers' who 'game' the system.... therefore, I can see, from Starner's point of view, why the new proposals to limit PIP will prove popular. This is merely to counter the threat of Reform. 

    If Labour are serious about getting sick/disabled people into work, they could start by raising the tax threshold to the minimum wage, which for a full time job, is approx £22K a year 


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 hours ago
    I stopped working because I could not anymore due to ill health - was not a choice.  This is all so confusing and what is the meaning of "light touch reviews" in light of the new criterias? So they are moving the goal posts and the safety net so anyone those Assessors (on a target to get rid of us) can make us fail on reasssements! I hardly leave my house as I have stress, anxity and struggle on many issues.  In the past employers threatneded me up for being ill and taking too much sick days off...I can't even do those jobs any longer.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 hours ago
    Vile, beyond words
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 hours ago
    What many have missed is thay Care Component of PiP is also a passport to Severe Disability Premium... over £80 a week.

    This will be lost too.

    And what does "Protection for Severe disabilities" mean ?

    What is Severe ?

    And if you can never work again ... some dictirs say this about severe mental conditions... is it full or part time work ?

    It seems she wants all psychiatric issues removed entirely from the benefits system.

    Of course this will just cost more elsewhere:
    1. more demands on Social Services,

    2. Admissions to psych wards ... 2K a week, 

    3. applications for Discretionary payments for rent, if you use you PiP to ESCAPE SOCIAL HOUSING as many currently do.

    It's a mess. And her advisors are not fit for purpose.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @Gabe L Only if you are still on ESA. And that won't be for long as everybody is in the process of migrating.

      There is no such premiums on UC, although you keep the value short term, because of transistional protection.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 hours ago
    A 2 percent Wealth Tax on people worth over 10 million in the UK...  yes, they exist ! ... would yield 45 Billion.

    This is 10x what they may get from putting 2 million PiP claimants on the bread line.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 hours ago
    Big Question: if you are on a 10 Year ongoing 'light touch' review...  will you be subject to a new full reassessment  ?

    This group accounts for only 7 percent of Pip claimants.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @Gabe L I would imagine the rule apply to every single person, no matter what length of the award. From Nov 2026, to even qualify for the DL element of PIP, you need 4 points on one activity. This applies to both new & existing claimants. There would be no reason why a 10 year award should, or would, be excluded. Many people even on a 10 year award, don't necessarily receive enhanced on both DL & mobility.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 hours ago
    Liz Kendall’s Alternative Green Paper Launch Speech....what should have been said!

    "We are here today in the House of Commons to launch this Green Paper. However, after deep reflection and consultation with colleagues across the aisle, we have made the decision to delay its introduction. This delay is not due to hesitation or lack of commitment to reform, but rather because it is long past time for us—on both sides of this House—to take responsibility for the fundamental failings of our welfare system. A system that has caused untold harm, trauma, and, in too many cases, the loss of life.

    We cannot, in good conscience, propose further reforms without first acknowledging the damage done. Therefore, today we begin not with policy, but with an apology.

    First, we apologise for our role in bringing into the UK’s disability assessment process a discredited model from the United States, designed not to support, but to deny claims and reduce costs at the expense of disabled people’s wellbeing. We recognise that this system—one we embraced—contributed to hundreds of suicides and incalculable suffering. We cannot undo the past, but we can and must acknowledge that these decisions cost lives.

    Second, we apologise for ignoring successive warnings from the United Nations, warnings that declared our treatment of disabled people a ‘human catastrophe.’ Instead of listening, we dismissed and deflected. Today, we recognise that those warnings were not alarmist—they were accurate.

    Third, we apologise for the way Universal Credit was designed and implemented, in particular the six-week waiting period that plunged so many into poverty, homelessness, and crisis. It was not an oversight; it was a policy choice—and it was the wrong one.

    Fourth, we apologise for outsourcing disability assessments to profit-driven companies that were given financial incentives to cut support, not to provide it. We accept that thousands of disabled people were left feeling gaslit, disbelieved, and humiliated, forced to fight for their dignity in a system designed to wear them down. We acknowledge the devastating mental health consequences of this—self-harm, breakdowns, even loss of life—and we take responsibility for allowing it to continue for so long.

    It has not been rocket science to understand that many of you are simply too chronically ill or disabled to work at all. Others could work only with extreme flexibility from employers—flexibility that society and the labour market have largely refused to provide. We have had the evidence for years. Reports have repeatedly shown this. And yet, it is only now that we are formally recognising the need for a Right to Try policy—ensuring that disabled people who do attempt work will never again be penalised or reassessed simply for trying. Many will never face reassessment again.

    But apologies are not enough. Today, we also commit to accountability.

    That is why we are launching an Independent National Inquiry into the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). This inquiry will examine:

    Ignored coroner’s reports that warned of benefit-related deaths.

    Hidden internal reports that exposed systemic failures.

    The deaths and long-term harm suffered by claimants due to government policy and negligence.


    We must face the truth of what has happened. This is not only about policy; this is about justice.

    Finally, we acknowledge that the political narrative surrounding welfare—driven by cross-party competitiveness—has been degrading, dehumanising, and unacceptable. We in government have not only enabled but encouraged sections of the press to follow our lead, spreading harmful rhetoric about disabled people, benefit claimants, and those too unwell to work. For this, we deeply apologise.

    Support, not suspicion. Dignity, not degradation. A safety net, not a trap. These are not just words. They must be the foundation of our new system.

    That process begins today. The Green Paper will not move forward until we have worked with disabled people, advocates, and experts to rebuild a system that recognises and respects their needs. We will not repeat the mistakes of the past. Instead, we will listen. And we will act."

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @CaroA How long did that monster take to type out?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @CaroA Very well written, but it'll never happen because ultimately HM Treasury, and by extension, vested interests in the financial markets, will dictate policy. It's the money, stupid.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 hours ago
    Hi does anyone know what will happen to people who work and also get pip how will these changes affect people like me who work part time and get pip??
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 hours ago
    I have to conclude that not giving any clear details about certain aspects, (such as what happens to the people in the support group, who are there because they are at severe risk, reg 35), is a deliberate plan to intimidate people with very severe illness....
    Nice. What a bunch of total W*****S
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    The scariest thing is, the linking of pip with ESA lcwra. The proposals will mean, if you don't have 4 daily living points on a pip descriptor,  i then you won't qualify for lcwra with your ESA and will be classed as a job seeker by DWP.
    I receive pip daily living but my points are made up of 2 for each descriptor. I also receive ESA support group. Under the proposed changes I will lose everything. 
    This will also affect other things such as, council tax support, prescription costs, dental care etc.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @Anon you can also add to that the benefit cap will come into effect on your housing support.  So if your rent is a grand per month or so, you'll receive 150- 200 pounds (very approx) less than your rent due to the benefit cap!!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @Anon This is what is causing the most outrage at the moment. I'll be shocked if this gets through.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    These reforms are simply appalling. Taking cash away from some of the poorest and most vulnerable in society. Whilst allowing the wealthy to gerrymander their earnings to receive large amounts of cash. For example a couple with kids and joint incomes over £100,000 can stash cash into pensions get tax relief and plan it so it brings down their earnings so they still benefit from child allowance, free hours for kids under 4 at nursery etc. also the grants for heat pumps which are £7500 -9000 and up to £16500 in some parts of Scotland tend to go to the better off. As you need to be an owner occupier and have a home suitable for the pump in the first place. As many poorer live in flats this isn’t possible generally. Also the current bill for pension tax relief is £50 billion annually 63% of this goes to the 5 million higher rate tax payers. The annual allowance was raised from £40,000 to £60,000 last year so if this was cut back down, this alone would raise large sums of money for the treasury.As they say wealth goes to wealth. 

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