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.
    · 1 days ago
    So what is the point of the coming consultation if they have decided that 4 points in one category must be required to qualify for PIP with other 4 points elese where?

    Can the outcome of the consultation reject that? 

    I am stressed out now
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @sevenbeed I don't think it can.  But there are questions in the green paper about how to support those who lose PIP after having it before - including the possibility of transitional protection.  The consultation will also look at how to support those who get a high number of overall points but spread over a larger range of criteria (basically, the old system).  That, perhaps, opens up the idea a new tier of PIP.  The paragraph is in italics, below.  The thing I'd like to have made clear is whether the November 2026 date means claims and reassessments STARTED after that date or whether those already in the system will also fall under the new rules.  For anyone starting a reassessment or claim earlier in 2026, that will be an important detail. 

      "We are mindful of the impact this change could have on people and so want to consider how we can best support those affected. This includes options for transitional protection for those who are no longer eligible for PIP and the entitlements linked to their award. In addition, we also want to consider how to support those with lower needs in a large number of PIP activities, as part of these changes. We are consulting on whether those who lose entitlement need any support and what this support could look like."
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Do they mean that  If you score 16 points across the daily living component you will not get any daily component unless at least one of the descriptors is 4 or do they mean that at the very minimum to get the standard you have to score a descriptor of 4?
    Because surely if you score 16 points across the descriptors they cannot ignore that you are in need of enhanced rate ?
    As many descriptiors you may score a few points in each and not get a total of 4 in one ??

    Surely that would be so cruel as so many of us have many points but across multiple descriptors ?

    Does anyone have any clarity ? 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @J. Totally agree
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @charles That's what it says. If you do not get a score of 4 in at least one descriptor, you won't get PIP daily living. Terrible news for many
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @charles That's what it means, and that's why it is being done. Most people on PIP dont score 4 points in a single category so they will lose not just PIP but also the LCWRA component of UC.

      This is a savage attack on millions of severely disabled people.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @charles You have to get 4 points in one descriptor and then at least another 4 in any other so you get 4 in cooking a meal but then you need at least another 4 made up by maybe 2 in one area and 2 in another this will only give you standard rate then you will have to get another 4 to 8 in another area but this is only daily living area the mobility is staying the same i have just wrote my MP about it requesting that she does not vote for this as will deprive a lot of us not just from pip but also carer element you can only get with pip I won't be able to wash go toilet etc without it so what would be the point going on and they say it will start with new claimants in November next year I am under review now been 5 months since I sent the paperwork back so are they gonna try do it on this review to get me off pip
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @charles As l understand it you have to score 4 in ONE daily living descriptor. Then a) for the standard rate daily living another 4 across the descriptors and b)for the enhanced rate another 8 points.
      She emphasised that it would not be the same for mobility component.
      I looked in detail on the Government website at the green paper itself.
      Apologies if I have misinterpreted any thing but don’t believe l have 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Does the no reassessment include those with indefinite fit notes?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Neil Cook I guess it would mean people whose conditions are unlikey to improve. it would be a medical dicision I think. for instance, visually impaired or totally blind people where a condition is expected to be unchanging and pip award is correct for that level of sight loss, or highest rate of pip with a degenerative condition, both where reassessment would be pointless. just my thoughts.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Not as bad as I feared. The anxiety level has fallen. I would imagine the government backed down against the backbenchers. In reality some of the things I read in the press would be impossible to do and would be open to court challenges. The new rules won't come in until Nov 26. I think they have looked at PIP and the only option would be to replace PIP and they don't have a clue to what to replace it with.  We still have to wait for the green paper for the details.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Onyx123 Not as bad? It's devastating for people not getting 4 points on 1 descriptor for pip,which most don't,then they lose their 
       lcwra on uc?? If you really can't work you're litrally screwed,they have to understand even if you didn't get pip you still may be totally incapable of doing work so what you supposed to live on? Fresh air???
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Onyx123 That's very different to me, what things did you read before in the press recently that they didn't implement and backed down on? Only thing I can see that was a realistic possibility mentioned recently was PIP being frozen which wasn't and to be honest that was only minor compared to the rest anyway. This is definitely worse than the leaks we have had over the last week prior.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    I got 11 points on my pip assessment but cant remember if i got at least 4 points on one descriptor but more than likely I didnt.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    They're going to tie LCWRA element to getting PIP, so that means if we lose PIP we'll lose everything. This is going to cost lives.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Aw Some, already losing the Severe Dissability Premium, as this will erode with the ESA to UC move. 

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