The DWP has confirmed that it will not delay the introduction of cutbacks, after the Work and Pensions Committee urged for ‘further increases’ to Universal Credit
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has reaffirmed its decision not to postpone the introduction of changes to the Universal Credit health element from April 2026, despite concerns voiced by a cross-party group of MPs. The Work and Pensions committee put forward six recommendations in its third report on the Get Britain Working: Pathways to Work green paper.
These suggestions include further increases to the Universal Credit standard allowance, throughout the tenure of this Parliament and delaying the reduction in Universal Credit health element until “an independent and comprehensive assessment of the impact the change could have on disabled people” has been carried out.
However, in a written response to the report, the DWP stated: “The new, lower UC (Universal Credit) health element will take effect on 6 April 2026. We will keep standard allowance rates under review.”
It continued: “The Universal Credit Act, which received Royal Assent on 3 September 2025, legislated for the first ever sustained, above inflation increase to the standard allowance, benefitting millions of people.
“This change, along with a reduction in the UC health element for new claimants, addresses perverse incentives in the UC system and better encourages those who can work to enter or return to employment. An updated Impact Assessment for the Bill was published in July 2025.”
The DWP has previously stated that nearly four million households will see an annual income boost estimated to be worth £725 under the new Bill, reports the Daily Record. Reforms outlined in the Universal Credit Act aim to rebalance the core payment and health top-up within Universal Credit.
The legislation will see the Universal Credit standard allowance permanently increase above inflation, reaching £725 by 2029/30 in cash terms for a single person aged 25 or over.
Commenting on the UK Government’s responses to the recommendations, Work and Pensions Committee Chair Debbie Abrahams said, “We recognise the compromises the Government made during the passage of the Universal Credit-PIP Bill, now the Universal Credit Act.
“However, the Committee report raised outstanding concerns that from April 2026, people with a new disability or health condition will receive half the financial support on UC Health, £54 per week, compared with someone with the same impairment or condition in March 2026, who will receive £105 per week.
“This is not only discriminatory, but without mitigations, will potentially push more people with disabilities and health conditions into poverty, exacerbating their condition and pushing them further away from the labour market.”
The MP for Oldham East and Saddleworth, added: “Addressing this properly could be a fiscal bonus to the Government too. A recent analysis estimated that up to £12.5 billion could be saved in DWP spending from reduced Universal Credit health claims and boosted tax receipts before the end of the decade if the DWP focused on better, more personalised, employment and health support.”
You can find all six recommendations from the Work and Pensions Committee, along with the UK Government’s response, on the GOV.UK website.
Measures in the Universal Credit Act
The Universal Credit Act includes measures that the DWP claims will address the ‘fundamental imbalance in the system which creates perverse incentives that drive people into dependency’ through:
- Increasing the Universal Credit standard allowance above inflation for the next four years – worth an estimated £725 by 2029/30 for a single adult aged 25 or over.
- Reducing the health top-up for new claims to £50 per week from April 2026.
- Ensuring that all existing recipients of the Universal Credit health element – and any new claimant meeting the Severe Conditions Criteria and/or that has their claims considered under the Special Rules for End of Life (SREL) – will receive the higher Universal Credit health payment after April 2026.
- Exemptions from reassessment for those with the most severe, lifelong conditions.
The DWP said the reforms will address the ‘fundamental imbalance in the system which creates perverse incentives that drive people into dependency’.


