
DWP manage migration to Universal Credit to start in a few weeks
Changes are on the horizon for Universal Credit claimants, with policy and benefits shifts pushing many towards Universal Credit from their existing support arrangements. The move, termed 'managed migration', will see legacy benefits phased out for new claimants.
These encompass a selection of payments previously offered through the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), such as Income Support, Income-based Jobseeker's Allowance, Income-related Employment and Support Allowance (ESA), Housing Benefit, Working Tax Credit, and Child Tax Credit.
You can find more comprehensive information on the transition to Universal Credit and any payment increases for current recipients below....
Universal Credit migration
The DWP is stepping up its efforts in the transition to Universal Credit. Initially, the DWP commenced the process with 60,000 notifications in February, with plans to intensify this figure to 83,000. Resolute on completing the migration, the final batch of notices is anticipated to be distributed by September.
The DWP stated that this gradual progression will "allow a little more time before the end of March 2026 to provide support for our more vulnerable customers and complete the migration of ESA cases to Universal Credit".
The DWP has allocated an extra £15 million to the Help to Claim initiative, bolstering support for over 800,000 people transitioning from ESA to Universal Credit by March 2026, which is two years earlier than the original 2028 deadline.
Sir Stephen Timms MP, Minister for Social Security and Disability, recently stated: "This funding boost will support many people as they make the move from old benefits to Universal Credit - ensuring customers feel confident and informed throughout the application process."
He urged claimants to be proactive, saying: "I want to encourage anyone receiving a migration notice over the coming months to act without delay to secure quick access to benefit entitlement."
Sir Stephen also highlighted broader reforms, adding: "The biggest reforms to employment support for a generation will also ensure more people get the help they need to get into work and on at work, by overhauling Jobcentres, tackling inactivity with local work, health and skills plans, and delivering a Youth Guarantee."
The Help to Claim service is dedicated to providing expert guidance to those starting a new Universal Credit claim or transitioning from an older benefits system. The service ensures continuity of support until the claimant receives their first correct payment.
Payment increase
Labour has confirmed that the standard allowance of Universal Credit will surpass the rate of inflation for the remainder of the current government's term. Baroness Maeve Sherlock said: "The proposed increases are inflation (measured by CPI), plus: 2.3 percent in 2026/27, 3.1 percent in 2027/28, 4.0 percent in 2028/29 and 4.8 percent in 2029/30.
"As such, in each year, the rates will be what they would have been under CPI uprating and then increased by the relevant percentage figure."
The current Universal Credit rate is:
Single and under 25 - £316.98
Single and 25 or over - £400.14
Couple both under 25 - £497.55 (for you both)
Couple if either partner are 25 or over £628.10 (for you both)
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3 hours ago
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Sign up to our Politics newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... An outspoken Scottish Labour MP has accused Sir Keir Starmer of continuing a 'relentless race to the bottom' with proposed benefit cuts as he refused to back the Prime Minister leading the party into the next general election. The pressure comes as Sir Keir said he took 'ownership' of the internal row engulfing his leadership. The Prime Minister has attempted to take pressure off his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney, who is facing accusations of driving the UK government's policy direction rather than the Labour leader. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Keir Starmer's government has now provided three major opportunities, in relatively quick succession, for opposition parties to accuse him of performing a U-turn (Picture: Ben Stansall) | PA Brian Leishman, Labour MP for Alloa and Grangemouth, is one of the key rebels piling pressure on Sir Keir to reverse his controversial cuts to disability benefits. Original plans restricted eligibility for Pip and cut the health-related element of Universal Credit. To try and see off the Labour rebellion, the changes to Pip will be implemented in November 2026 and apply to new claimants only, while all existing recipients of the health element of Universal Credit will have their incomes protected in real terms. The policy is devolved and will not apply in Scotland, but Holyrood's funding for social security is dependent on how much UK ministers allocate to the policy area. 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Scotsman
4 hours ago
- Scotsman
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Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The findings will come as a boost to Sir Ker in a week where his authority has been shaken by the major Labour rebellion on welfare cuts. Some 126 Labour MPs had signed an amendment that would halt the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill in its tracks when it faces its first Commons hurdle on Tuesday. Leading rebels now believe the concessions on offer, which include protecting personal independence payments (Pip) for all existing claimants, will be enough to win over a majority. However, the fallout threatens to cause lasting damage, as harder line rebels remain opposed to the legislation and some backbenchers have called for a reset of relations between Number 10 and the parliamentary party. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The reversal means Chancellor Rachel Reeves now faces a scramble to fill a potential hole in her budget this autumn, with the cuts now likely to save much less than the £4.8 billion the UK government had expected. Economists at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and the Resolution Foundation have both suggested the changes could reduce that figure by up to £3bn. But Downing Street has so far declined to set out its own figures for how much it now expects to save, or to say how the shortfall will be covered beyond insisting there would be no 'permanent' increase in borrowing and refusing to rule out tax rises. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Sir Keir told broadcasters on Friday: 'The most important thing is that we can make the reform we need. We talked to colleagues, who've made powerful representations, as a result of which we've got a package, which I think will work. We can get it right. 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Scotsman
4 hours ago
- Scotsman
Scottish Labour MP lays into Keir Starmer's 'race to the bottom' as welfare cuts pressure mounts
Sign up to our Politics newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... An outspoken Scottish Labour MP has accused Sir Keir Starmer of continuing a 'relentless race to the bottom' with proposed benefit cuts as he refused to back the Prime Minister leading the party into the next general election. The pressure comes as Sir Keir said he took 'ownership' of the internal row engulfing his leadership. The Prime Minister has attempted to take pressure off his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney, who is facing accusations of driving the UK government's policy direction rather than the Labour leader. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Keir Starmer's government has now provided three major opportunities, in relatively quick succession, for opposition parties to accuse him of performing a U-turn (Picture: Ben Stansall) | PA Brian Leishman, Labour MP for Alloa and Grangemouth, is one of the key rebels piling pressure on Sir Keir to reverse his controversial cuts to disability benefits. Original plans restricted eligibility for Pip and cut the health-related element of Universal Credit. To try and see off the Labour rebellion, the changes to Pip will be implemented in November 2026 and apply to new claimants only, while all existing recipients of the health element of Universal Credit will have their incomes protected in real terms. The policy is devolved and will not apply in Scotland, but Holyrood's funding for social security is dependent on how much UK ministers allocate to the policy area. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Asked by the BBC if the revised plans will pass in the Commons on Tuesday, Mr Leishman said: 'I hope not.' Rebels still a threat to Starmer He added: 'I'm certainly working to make sure that it doesn't. Quite simply, the concessions that were made at the tail end of last week, they are not enough. 'The sensible thing to do, the common sense thing that the government should do, is to withdraw the Bill and consult with organisations and charities that are experts in the field - come back to the table with a proper welfare system.' Brian Leishman, MP for Alloa and Grangemouth. Pic: Michael Gillen Mr Leishman said 'some have been placated by the compromises and the concessions', but he warned there was 'a healthy amount of us, a big cohort of MPs, who feel this [legislation] should be withdrawn'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He said: 'Behind the scenes, there's conversations being held all the time. My gut reaction would be there is enough of us to think again.' MP criticises cuts Mr Leishman, who has been the only Scottish Labour MP to openly criticise Sir Keir, insisted 'what we have seen over the last decade-and-a-half has been chronic austerity that has really impoverished some of the most vulnerable people in the country'. He added: 'The notion that we solve these austere cuts with more cuts, that's frankly ridiculous. Instead of this relentless race to the bottom that cut after cut after cut ultimately leads to and decimates society, what we've got to do is look at how we raise revenues.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Asked if Labour was the party for him, amid speculation former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn could set up a breakaway party, Mr Leishman said: 'I'm proud to be a Labour party member. 'The Labour party really is the most likely vehicle to achieve a much more equitable and fairer society. I have to try and shift the Labour party to where I think it should be.' Mr Leishman, who said he was not proud of Labour's first year in government, was asked if Sir Keir was the right person to lead the party into the next general election. He said: 'I'm not interested in the personnel. I think the Prime Minister has shown that degree of honesty that I think the electorate will appreciate. He admits he's made mistakes. One year into a five-year term, we've got to do better.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The UK government has been criticised for its proposed cuts to disability benefits The MP stressed the situation was 'not irretrievable for him [Starmer]', but warned backbench MPs 'should be consulted much more on policy' going forward. He said: 'The next election is four years away and we've got to see demonstrable change in culture from the government.' Amid pressure on his chief of staff that he has misread the mood of Labour backbenchers over the controversial welfare reforms, Sir Keir told the Sunday Times 'all these decisions are my decisions and I take ownership of them'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He said: 'I do not talk about staff and I'd much prefer it if everybody else didn't.' Sir Keir Starmer's chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, in Downing Street. Photo: Jonathan Brady/PA Wire | Jonathan Brady/PA Wire The Prime Minister also told the paper that allegations in a book by Patrick Maguire and Gabriel Pogrund, Get In, that Mr McSweeney was setting the government's agenda were 'total b*******'. Sir Keir has hit back at allegations his government's agenda is not in tune with traditional Labour values. 'I'm sorry, that is a charge I do not accept,' he said. Further concessions possible 'We settled the public pay dispute. We've got breakfast clubs being rolled out in 750 schools. We've announced free school dinners today for children from families on Universal Credit. That's 500,000 children who will now get free school meals. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad "We've just re-nationalised the railways. We've set up the first publicly owned company in I don't know how long, in GB Energy. You name it, each one of the things I've just run through is core Labour value. I don't accept that charge.' UK Health Secretary Wes Streeting | Jeff Overs/BBC/PA Wire Health Secretary Wes Streeting has signalled confidence the UK government will win a crunch vote on welfare reforms on Tuesday, but did not rule out further concessions. Mr Streeting said the changes 'have put us in a much better position' and give 'peace of mind' to those in receipt of personal independence payments. 'When things change and evolve as you bring in new systems, it does change sometimes from group to group, student finance being an example,' he told the BBC's Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He said 'we've got to listen' when asked if further concessions could be made on Pip. Unite general secretary Sharon Graham has called for the government to start from scratch on the Bill and said the latest plans were 'divisive and sinister'.