Benefits and Work has compiled a list of over 500 conditions arranged in order of how hard it is to get an award of PIP, using the DWP’s own Stat-Xplore database.

The overall average success rate for PIP claims is 52%.

But this can vary greatly depending on the condition.

So, for example, awards for continence related conditions tend to fall below the average:

  • Urge incontinence  13.7%
  • Stress incontinence  15.7%
  • Faecal soiling (encopresis) 23.8%
  • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) 26.1%

Awards for arthritis, on the other hand, are above the average:

  • Osteoarthritis of other single joint  56.5%
  • Osteoarthritis of Knee  64.2%
  • Osteoarthritis of Hip 73.8%
  • Primary generalised Osteoarthritis 74.0%
  • Rheumatoid arthritis 74.7%

Awards relating to mental health vary widely:

  • Anxiety disorders - Other / type not known  38.8%
  • Generalised anxiety disorder  42.7%
  • Anxiety and depressive disorders – mixed  49.6%
  • Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)  58.2%
  • Bipolar affective disorder  61.3%
  • Schizophrenia  69.7%

Some conditions are extremely likely to attract an award:

  • Dementia 94.1%        
  • Motor neurone disease 97.5%
  • Down’s syndrome 99.6%
  • Creutzfeldt - Jacob disease (CJD) 100%

But on its own this doesn’t tell the whole tale.  For example, it doesn’t tell us what percentage of claimants got the enhanced rate of one or both components.

We can drill down further into DWP statistics to get these details. But it would be an enormous task to produce this information for every condition.

And it still wouldn’t tell us whether claimants are more or less likely to get the award that they think is correct.

So, we’d like to hear from readers about which conditions you think are the hardest to make a PIP claim for. 

You may have experience of claiming for more than one condition.  You may have helped people with different conditions who have put in a claim. Or you may consider your condition to be hard to claim for because it is treated with scepticism by some in the health professions.

Based on your feedback, we will produce more information about award rates for specific conditions.

Members can download the full list of over 500 conditions and percentage success rates in a pdf file entitled ‘Success rates for PIP claims by condition’ from the ‘Claims’ section of the PIP guides page.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    My mum suffers greatly with TN (Trigeminal Neuralgia) unfortunately, which is also nick named the suicide desease. She is in immense pain every day and as her daughter it's so hard to watch. She can't be under bright lights or watch certain flashes. She says it feels like a man with a pick axe hitting her head. An attack comes whenever it wants to as well. So she can't work because of this yet PIP wouldn't recognise it on her application form!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Dem Watson Oh, the poor lady! I also have Trigeminal Neuralgia (linked to my MS).  I didn't know it was nicknamed 'the suicide disease', but I can completely believe that.  Luckily I was referred to the Chronic Pain Clinic at my local hospital, and I have drugs to control it now.  Couldn't your Mum see her GP and ask to be referred to a Chronic Pain unit?  They were amazing, supportive and so helpful.  It's worth a try!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    Going back to my wife's move from dla to pip (with the great assistance from our B&W membership guides)her award was reduced to lower daily living rate. On reviewing the points she had not been awarded a single point for lifelong mental health issues, supported by a Clinical Psycologist evidence, which had been accepted under previous dla criteria. The non awards just happened to keep the claim total a few points from qualifying for full rates. We did a second review but knocked back again and did not continue to an appeal as the fear of losing any more benefit and the 12 months of stress the claim took became unbearable. If they had approved just one of the mental health sections a full claim would have been due. She qualified on purely physical problems. A very suspect bias against mental health issues somewhat borne out by the % figures in the above.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @nobby66 Same, although I qualify on mobility I niticed they ignored all the other conditions!
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    · 1 years ago
    Epilepsy is invisible (most of the time) and fluctuating (all of the time).  It is also a complex condition with many different types of seizures. It is very difficult for someone who may be unconscious to explain how being unconscious affects them.  It is difficult to get any award without having to go to a tribunal.  Many people with epilepsy are isolated and have missed out on educational opportunities and are ill equipped to engage with the system or to self advocate.  There is very little help available so in many cases they give up before even requesting MR.  Many people with epilepsy live in poverty as a result.  It is the condition with the biggest disability employment gap so earning a living when and if you are well enough is also extremely difficult.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Gail Barry Similar scenario here. I once got pushed out of a volunteer role when tge council decuded everyone needed H&S training. I wasnt allowed to do tgevtraining as an unpaid member if staff so despite being the only person in that museum with a history Masters I got the bum's rush. Go to the JC and they offer me a cleaning job in the same museum.... I have Cerebral Palsy and adrenal insufficiency which was the reason the museum refused to employ me in the first place!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @kysgillett Yes! My uncle was 60 and though he has worked pretty consistently considering his epilepsy he had a fall from his pushbike and broke his neck. Hideously he still  had to gi through a PIP tribunal. Ridiculous. Judge took one look and said, "I dont know why you are here, Mr S" and recomnendend full award.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @kysgillett I claimed for epilepsy, uncontrolled focal awareness, switching from DLA to PIP, the health professional was a physio, the only knowledge of epilepsy he had was that it causes broken bones, I'd never done that, so I was lying.  I live in N Ireland, we don't have enough neuros, hardly anything is known about epilepsy, Wednsday 1/3 I had an appointment with a dentist for tooth extraction with complications, when she saw epilepsy, she took fright, and wouldn't go ahead with the way my seizures happen, in desperation I said I could take more of a tablet to control it, so I got a new appointment, but I was so insulted by her I cancelled it all.  And I'm now a pensioner and have never had paid work even though I have two degrees, I'm just too dangerous
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    I suffer myself from Fibromialja, and every time I apply I get rejected, which on a good day I can whilst moving about I appear fine, despite always being in pain, and dropping things, and struggling with dexterity issues. 

    On bad days, its much harder to deal with an ordinary life, I try but it’s very hard. 

    Despite many cross over conditions on that list which are mentioned, including full body hiccups, invollentry.  

    But I get no where, always rejected, so I need to persevere on.  


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Greg Sully I have fibromyalgia too plus ptsd but know matter how many times I appeal I never get on high rate it’s so stressful that they don’t know much about this hidden disease and how it takes away your life that you once knew some people can live normally with it I don’t understand this as I had to stop working change my diet my life style etc and the pain is really bad also fibro fog being off balance relying on others to help especially family if your lucky to have .we can’t beat this we have to live with this condition 11 years I have and 2 years ago ptsd and depression.fibromyalgia should be listed it ruined your life and it ruined mine I wish I never had this , but I do .dwp should not take fibromyalgia people down we are people with a horrendous disease off zero fault on our part .worse is the winter 🥶.we need heat all the time as our body’s are always cold regardless and to just throw fibromyalgia as no big deal so totally unacceptable.we are disabled a word I didn’t want to ever say but I have accepted I am disabled and I do need help financially and well being .try being bedded down for up to 4. Weeks as your body is in pain and there is absolutely nothing we can do but take medication which doesn’t work most times depending on the flares , I wish they could be in our body for a day then they would understand.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    My partner has a very rare condition Pulmonary arterial hypertension. It affects both the lungs and heart, and is degenerative and progressive with risk of sudden collapse/blackout/death at any time. He cannot work and the consultant told me he should be supervised 24/7 in case of black out so I cannot work now. He is under specialist care from Royal Papworth hospital in Cambridge. Following his confirmed diagnosis, and with the help of the Pulmonary Hypertension Association, the consultants letters and a friend who's a retired GP (and actually had some knowledge of this disease, and did research to find out as much as possible) we managed to complete the PIP form and undergo a 45 min phone assessment (with our retired GP friend present and contributing) resulting in PIP awarded as Enhanced for Mobility but Standard for Daily Living at first attempt. My partner was very breathless through the effort of simply talking, which was pointed out during the assessment and we asked for the questions to be a steady stream with time to answer and recover from the effort. Emphasis was placed also on how his mental health is affected ie depression and anger making him socially inept and very irritable and rude to people. We also stressed that if I wasn't around he would not eat or drink or get washed and dressed due to the depression. He used a shower seat but after the slightest exertion he needed to just sit and rest to recover his breathing. We were astounded as we fully expected to have to appeal a rejection. I do think that the result is heavily reliant upon both the information you give yourself (or have agreed that someone else can be present to assist), having a copy of the completed claim form in front of you to refer to and the attitude of the individual assessor on the day. The assessor probably has to work to department statistics to ensure that X number of claims are rejected ( or am I just a cynic?) PIP was awarded for 3 years and the renewal is due in November this year. We will be prepared for a fight and will be pushing for enhanced rate for both aspects of PIP as he is physically worse than 3 years ago. I kept a photocopy of the original claim form and the notes that I made during the phone assessment and will use those, along with the info/advice from this site, to deal with the renewal.
    Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is very rare (as opposed to pulmonary hypertension) and there are only a handful of specialist hospitals in the UK that patients can go to for tests, diagnosis, further tests, treatment to slow the progression. There is no cure....it just gets progressively worse until the heart gives up under the effort of working ineffectively for so long. It's an invisible disease...other than deathly pale/pallid skin, breathlessness, blue lips, white nails.....he looks normal to most people. 
    I do know of many PAH patients who are having their PIP claims rejected. I encourage them to appeal. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    My husband has Ankolosing Spondylitis and has little movement in his neck.
    He has limited movement without severe pain. Has been turned down twice, just because, I believe, he soldiers on pushing himself through the pain. The questions he was asked over the phone didn't really address his real issues. I feel that it would be far better to contact GPs who see and know their patients.
    My husband is a proud man who pushes through extreme pain, just to look at his frame, it is obvious the struggle daily living is .Apart from work which, even according to the Specialist, he really shouldn't do, he struggles to walk any distance without rest 
    I find PIP drives exaggeration, just to qualify.
    It's really not fit for purpose and so many who need it, deserve it, fall through the system.
    (Perhaps it's plan!!?)
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    Osteoporosis 
    It doesn’t even seem to be recognised but yet a consultant is very concerned about me because the markets are very low in DEXA Scans he has compared with one another saying I have the bones of a much older person ( I’m 58)
    Very worrying for me as I live alone and have no one to help me

    I was also diagnosed with Neurological Functional Disorder (NFD) which I read that alot of doctors no nothing about, but yet that is also a serious disease in itself and can definitely worsen

    For me this is the tip of the iceberg as I also have Osteoarthritis in my feet which is very painful and I was told would spread.
    When I go shopping which is not very often my feet swell which I believe is due to my kidneys ( had a lot of kidney infections in the past along with kidney stones)
    I can only lie on one side for five minutes, so I don’t know if it is to do with the above

    My other issues are IBS, Fibromyalgia and I am covered in head to toe Plaque Psoriasis 

    Lastly I have been through severe problems of bullying and harassment by neighbours that lasted yrs ( I was able to move in the end but not before it had caused psychological damage) because they only allow a single person £85.50 per wk for rent and you can’t find much for that

    Since moving and have become very reclusive and Agoraphobic because of people

    I have also gone through losing loved ones and had to cope with it alone as I was not able to find grief counselling ( my doctor has not been helpful in a nutshell)

    As a result of everything I was told by someone that I am most certainly suffering from PTSD
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Anne U sound very similar to myself. I have been suffering back problem for years, I also have had angina fir several years. At first the doc and hospital said it was probley a panic attack. I new it wasn't at one point I felt as tho I was having a heart attack.  I didn't go to hospital as it past so that was the angina.  It took years for them to admit I had angina.  They basic said the back problem was also in my head . .life got so bad for me in 2019 I took an overdose and was almost dead they put me in an induced coma . My gps don't, ,listen all the do is dust out drugs. I suffer terrible panic attacks and have been so a lso,aged suicide comes in
      To my mind often. I'm scared to die. I had a pain management appointment last week . I had had a phone conversation with the doctor who was doing the steroid injections on 29th December 2020 he to.d me I had bone disease in my spin . Caused by getting older. He could help and put me on the wIting list.  I took va.ium to go to that hospital as I'm agoraphobic.  My son had to lose a whole day's wages as well as oay £25 to park for 2 hours. He also got  parking ticket for being a couple of minutes late. Anyway this dic who spike to me I. 2020 after looking at my MRI scan has seen overdose on my notes and basically said it's all in my head it muscle pain ? He had done a new  MRI scan , I asked how he could have come to that co collusion and he said I needed anit depresants. I'm already on them so he said there are i es that have pai. Killer in them . I have never been so I suited I. My life. So yet again. It's all in my head. I. Still going to put I. For higher rate dla but iv been told I should be on pip.  I shall put in for it with the letters I have to prove I have beento the hospital.  I'm on lower rate but can't, eave the house alone. I so e ti e wish I had of died I. 2019 I have no future I'm totally alone 23 hours a day. I hope things work out for you I really do . ❤️





  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    I had a benefits check, I told them I had high rate mobility award , they said no you haven’t, I said what’s dla going in my bank every month, the lady phoned dla and they said award stopped in 2019, year I became a pensioner, it’s still going in and I have ordered a mobility vehicle 6 months ago🤔
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    I haven't been out for 3 years due to anxiety. I have depression. I have stress incontinence and I also have fibromyalgia which is quite debilitating. I've been refused pip twice. They tell me I can walk 200 yards and plan a journey, even though I can't get out of my house without almost passing out with my anxiety. Also I spend a lot of time in bed as I can't move around as I should be when my episodes are bad. I live alone and 30 miles from family.  I got Zero points. Hope this helps your survey. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Gail Barry I no its crazy I have the same problem , even steroid injections are not helping the pain . To be honest I'm so fed I want to throw I. The town. I hope you can get this sorted because I no the pain you must be in . ❤️
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Celia I have arthritis in my back, pinched nerves and more, I can walk but only with care, the health professional I was with said I had walked a number of metres from the bus stop, he wasn't there, did he take a tape measure, how did he know that I was on a bus
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    Zero points for chronic BAM (Bile Acid Malabsorption) which is a condition of the bowel and can make it very difficult to go out without soiling one self as the urge is very sudden. No one that I have had for an assessment has known what the condition is and have been given zero points for soiling several times everyday and prevents alot of people from leaving the house. Very frustrating 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Jules I have Bam, b12, anxiety and depression and it’s awful when to the face to face assessment and I’m just waiting on the outcome 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Jules Even if they understand the condition, that sounds like one that does not fit the way PIP works very well. The only reasons you can score points for problems going out are to do with mental problems or physical problems with walking. Physical problems that cause problems going out other than walking just don't score according to the rules, regardless of how the assessor or decision maker views the condition.

      The inverse is true for engaging with others. If you have a pain or fatigue condition (or incontinence) that makes you uncomfortable or unable to see people socially, that won't score any points for engaging because only mental problems with interaction count.

      It's ridiculously restrictive.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    Cannot claim pip for Crohn’s disease!! They totally disregard this disabling condition 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Rain Hello Rain. I have a rare very severe digestive disorder developed after a bad viral kidney infection years ago. I do get faecal incontinence when this flares up but it scored zero as I manage the problem with vast doses of anti diarrhoea meds and showering and staying in when I am liable to soil myself, so effectively self management for an untreatable condition excluded me from any score. The disease also affects my stomach lining so my diet has to be extremely limited too, and this element is extremely painful, even affecting sleep. Still not bad enough to score though
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Kim 30 per cent of people with Crohn’s as their primary condition do succeed in getting PIP. Obviously it should be much more than that for this very serious and disabling ling term disease.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Kim Its says in the document that 30 per cent of people with Crohn’s as their main problem received an award. You probably need to experience faecal incontinence every day though, as external encouragement to eat too.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    The condition ME/CFS is very hard to get DLA/PIP for as it is a disabling, fluctuating condition and it is a hidden disability.  It doesn't fit the tick box format.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    I have narcolepsy and cataplexy. It's neurological and we are missing brain cells. But it's often just that sleep thing so it's not as easy to get PIP. A small amount of people have got through as neurological. It's the luck of the draw really.
    Awareness is key to a faster diagnosis and better understanding. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @H Korbey My grandaughter has just been diagnosed with both these conditions started at 15 fainting thirty times a day she was taken by ambulance to hospital many times now under the nurological consultants at leeds they have been fantastic and gave all the medical info for her mum to fill out the forms she only had a two  min phone call asking a few questions to mum and received full pip with no end date she is 18:now and getting a medical dog to use at university to make her aware when the hormones change and she will faint go to the group page for this condition you can get help filling in the form and getting the medical evidence you need this condition is lifelong and cant be cured  only maintained my grandaughter was gutted as she was aiming to train as a doctor but cant now so she is aiming at becoming a teacher dont give up keep fighting . 





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    · 1 years ago
    Dissociative Identity Disorder. It used to be almost automatic that you were awarded DLA for life, and that's what they gave me. With PIP they won't give me any points at all. I do get points for my physical problems but nothing for my mental health.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Angel I suffer with DID but also FND too. When I was On DLA they awarded me high level on living and mobility because of the DID. When I had a phone assessment for PIP the DID was totally disregarded. I was awarded low on the living part and high on the mobility but was told that was because of my FND symptoms only. I couldn't cope with appealing. Maybe I should have. When you've spent your childhood being told nobody will believe you it's hard to think anything you say now would be any different.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    Fibromyalgia is a hard one to claim for as it is quite a complex condition with no definitive diagnosis. If you dare to say you have good days, you are doomed to failure.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    EHLERS Danlos syndrome (inherited connective tissue disorder from faulty gene/s) and Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome - even most GP’s have never heard of either of this life impacting, whole body affecting rare conditions. A nightmare to pigeon hole the ‘ impact’ on every day life’ as every autonomic and physical body function is affected by faulty collagen. Our three kids were lucky enough to have been identified with these conditions By Kings College hospital consultants, but was still an absolute nightmare to go through the DLA, and then PIP process as the assessors didn’t even have these rare conditions on a medical database! Horrendous process, with many reassessments despite being genetic - and despite over 200 medical reports :( 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 years ago
      @Karen Upfield I agree karen the pathway with Eds is a hard road to travel all five of ten grandchildren have it three who are reliant on tube feeding youngest 12 eldest 21 , they get dla and changed to pip i have eds and managed to keep working up to aged 55 now i am in a power wheelchair my spine has been effected worse by convective tissue wearing out three fused discs pressing on lower three discs casusing ipressure  in to my spine neurosurgeon wont touch me said i am too high risk , yet still waiting for pip renewal five months now 

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    I think the less obvious (clinically speaking) mental health conditions are the hardest to claim for. There aren't any x-rays or MRI scans to provide rock solid evidence of depression (for example) and it's particularly hard to prove how it affects your daily life. I said I barely eat, sometimes once a day, sometimes not at all, and in the assessment report they gave me zero points for that category because I was apparently had no problems with eating. Was pretty shocked when I saw it. Thankfully, I did have all the hard evidence they love for my physical disabilities so got enough points in other categories for an award. However, if I'd only been claiming based on my depression, anxiety and OCD, I doubt I would have got my claim approved.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    I have read the list on the member's site and what I find most amazing is the scarcity of conditions being awarded at 100% when it must be blatantly obvious from the conditions listed in the 90%+ section of the list (and many other sections too) that people need a maximum award. I cannot see the point in drilling any further down into this data because in reality many people have multiple conditions and two people with the same condition might not necessarily have the same experiences of symptoms/effects. The whole thing needs to be looked at from a different perspective and I doubt if this government is actually capable of that, much less willing to consider it. The very notion that people with long term illnesses and disabilities have to prove the impact of their condition is demeaning and ludicrous. And yes I have been through this process multiple times for myself and my partner and I wouldn't have got the awards I have without the help of this wonderful site.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    Can't help but notice that a lot of conditions which either exclusively or predominantly affect women are not taken seriously or their affects are underestimated. These include fibromyalgia and endometriosis often associated with  POTS. Women are often subjected to gaslighting and it is often suggested that their pain is all in their mind. If attitudes propagated in the training of doctors about such conditions are not challenged it is hardly surprising that DWP decision makers who have no medical expertise at all come to make bad decisions.













  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 years ago
    I have severe ME, spend most of my life in bed, would have adverse consequences from walking, standing or even sitting up too long.
    But I wouldn't have got the award of standard rate on both counts if I didn't conveniently also have bad arthritis in my hip - a minor problem for me, since I'm too ill to walk much anyway. But the fact that my hip doesn't flex outwards so I can't wash between my toes, struggle to put a sock on etc, that's where I gained my points.
    Musculoskeletal conditions definitely score higher. If I had the hip replacement I've been offered I'd lose my PIP, and probably my Blue Badge too. But I still wouldn't be able to get out of bed.
    I do see that ME is hard for them to gauge - before this relapse I had only mild ME and was working, swimming, having a life.  And now not. But there's no objective evidence I'm this ill now, they just have to take it on trust from me. And I'm sure there are people who are tempted to exaggerate to get more money, I'm just not one of them.

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