UK halves health element of universal credit for most new claimants

Change
The UK reduced the health element of universal credit for new claimants to £50 a week, halving and freezing the payment from April unless a claimant’s condition is assessed as terminal or severe and lifelong with no prospect of improvement.
Why it matters
The change raises the evidentiary bar for new claims by imposing a narrow durability test that claimants must meet to receive the higher payment. As a result, many people with debilitating but non-permanently progressive conditions will be placed on the lower frozen rate and must demonstrate lifetime severity to qualify.
UK halves health element of universal credit for most new claimants
Implications
  • New universal credit claimants with severe health conditions must obtain and submit medical evidence that a condition is terminal or meets the 'severe and lifelong' standard at claim assessment or their health element will be set at £50 a week.

Unlock the decision layer.

Know what changes, what’s at risk, and what needs action next.

  • Implications: What shifts in cost, supply, or compliance.
  • Who is affected: Which teams, contracts, or flows are exposed.
  • What to watch: Deadlines, triggers, and when action becomes necessary.
  • Real-time alerts: Get notified when a change becomes actionable — not noise..
  • Ask AI: Go deeper on any change in seconds.

No credit card · 14-day trial · Active in seconds

Unlock the decision layer
Source

The Guardian

Topics

Human Rights

Stay updated

Don’t check for changes.
Get them as they happen.

Real-time alerts on binding changes, a daily brief of what matters, and a weekly reset — without the noise.

No credit card· 14-day trial· Active in seconds