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DWP

Universal Credit

Monthly means-tested payment from the DWP for working-age people on a low income or out of work, replacing six legacy benefits.

Headline rate£209.34carer's element (monthly)
Last updated (2026-04-20)
Sourced from: GOV.UK

Overview

Universal Credit is a monthly means-tested payment administered by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). It is paid to people of working age who are on a low income, out of work, or unable to work. Universal Credit was designed to consolidate six older benefits — income-based Jobseeker's Allowance, income-related Employment and Support Allowance, Income Support, Working Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, and Housing Benefit — into a single monthly payment. The amount received is made up of a standard allowance and, where applicable, additional elements for children, disability, housing costs, and childcare. The final amount is reduced by earnings above a work allowance (if one applies) at a taper rate, and by certain other income or savings over set thresholds. Claimants can receive Universal Credit across the UK, though Northern Ireland operates its own version administered by the Department for Communities, and claimants in Scotland have some flexibilities in how payments are structured. Individual entitlement and the exact amount payable are determined by the DWP based on a claimant's circumstances in each monthly assessment period. This page references figures and eligibility criteria stated on the primary GOV.UK source at the time of extraction; the authoritative source for any individual claim remains the relevant government department.

Applies in England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland. Administered by DWP. This page is general information; contact DWP for your individual circumstances.

How this page was verified

  • Checked against 1 primary source from DWP and linked source records on this page.
  • Last verified on .
  • Reviewed by Due to You editorial review under the editorial policy and methodology.

How the amount is calculated

Universal Credit is assembled in a specific order each month. DWP does not publish a single "UC award" figure on the claim — instead, your monthly statement is the result of four steps, and understanding the order is the difference between feeling that the system is arbitrary and being able to predict your own award.

Step 1 — The maximum amount

DWP adds together every element your household qualifies for. The list is: the standard allowance (set by your age and whether you're a single claimant or a couple), the child element for each qualifying child, the LCW or LCWRA element if you're assessed as having limited capability for work, the carer element if you provide 35+ hours of care, the childcare element (up to 85% of paid childcare costs), and the housing element if you pay rent. This total is the "maximum amount" — what you would receive if you had no income and no savings.

Step 2 — The work allowance

If your household has a child or a limited-capability-for-work element, you also have a work allowance: a ring-fenced slice of earnings that isn't tapered. There are two rates. The higher rate applies if you're not receiving the housing element; the lower rate applies if you are. Earnings below the allowance do not reduce your UC at all. Above the allowance, the taper kicks in. Households without children and without LCW have no work allowance — every pound of earnings is tapered from the first pound.

Step 3 — The 55% taper

Earnings above the work allowance reduce your maximum amount by 55p for every £1 earned. This is what makes UC a net-of-earnings benefit rather than a binary on/off. A worker on £1,000 per month of assessed earnings with a £344 work allowance keeps the first £344, then pays a 55% deduction on the remaining £656 — that's £361 shaved off the maximum amount for the month.

Step 4 — Other income and capital

Some other income (e.g. some pensions, student income, certain other benefits) is deducted pound-for-pound from the maximum amount after the taper. Capital rules are separate: up to £6,000 is ignored; from £6,000 to £16,000 DWP assumes a tariff income of £4.35 per £250 (or part thereof) above £6,000; above £16,000 you are not entitled to UC at all.

Why the order matters

A lot of UC confusion comes from people assuming the taper applies to all their earnings, or forgetting the work allowance exists, or double-counting savings. The canonical order is: build up the maximum → subtract earnings above the work allowance at 55% → subtract pound-for-pound other income → check the capital limit. Every figure on your UC statement traces back through these four steps.

Calculated amounts are based on your entire monthly assessment period — a rolling month starting on the date you first claimed, not the calendar month. Earnings and changes of circumstance are attributed to the assessment period in which they're reported to HMRC via RTI (Real Time Information) — not the pay date on your payslip. This is the single most common source of unexpectedly-low UC payments for workers paid weekly or four-weekly.

See our guide Moving from legacy benefits to Universal Credit if you're being managed-migrated, and our UC estimator for a scenario-based calculation.

Worked examples

Illustrative scenarios with plausible household compositions. Figures are rounded for readability; run the triage or a calculator for a personal estimate.

Part-time worker with one child, renting

Priya, 34, single parent, one child aged 6, works 16 hours at £12.50 an hour, renting a 2-bed flat in Leeds for £850 a month.

Priya's assessed monthly earnings from the DWP perspective: around £867 gross, £815 after income tax and NI (for illustration; UC uses net earnings as reported through RTI).

Her maximum UC amount is built from: standard allowance (£424.90), one child element (£303.94), plus the housing element (which in Leeds for a 2-bed local housing allowance sits around £850 a month, matching her rent). Total maximum: ~£1,579 a month.

As she's receiving the housing element, she gets the lower work allowance of £427. Earnings above that are tapered at 55%. £815 − £427 = £388 of tapered earnings; at 55% that's about £213 off the maximum. So her UC award is roughly £1,579 − £213 = £1,366 a month, paid on top of her wages.

If her employer reports two pay dates within a single assessment period — common at the start or end of the calendar year depending on payroll cadence — her UC for that month will be around £473 lower than usual. The next assessment period will compensate.

Couple, both in work, no children

Dan and Ellie, both 29, live together, no children. Dan earns £1,300 a month; Ellie earns £900. They rent privately at £700 a month.

Because they have no children and no LCW/LCWRA element, their household gets no work allowance — every pound of joint earnings is tapered from the first pound.

Maximum amount: joint standard allowance (£666.97) + housing element (£700) = £1,367. Joint earnings: £2,200. Taper at 55% on £2,200 = £1,210. £1,367 − £1,210 = £157 per month UC award. At this earnings level they are close to the point where UC would taper away entirely.

Note: this is a case where claimants often don't bother — assuming £157 a month isn't worth the admin. But being on UC is what passports them to the Warm Home Discount, NHS Low Income Scheme, and Council Tax Reduction in most areas. Leaving UC leaves those behind too.

Lone parent with two children, newly unemployed

Amira, 41, lone parent, two children aged 9 and 12, recently made redundant. No earnings this month. Rents a housing association property at £620 a month.

With no earnings, Amira's UC is essentially her maximum amount: standard allowance (£424.90) + first child element (£351.88, because the elder was born before April 2017) + second child element (£303.94) + housing element (£620) = ~£1,701 a month.

The five-week wait applies: UC is paid a month in arrears plus a week of processing, so the first actual payment lands five weeks after her claim starts. Amira can request an advance payment of up to 100% of her estimated first payment, which is then deducted from the following six months' awards at roughly one-sixth per month. See our advance payments guide for the trade-offs.

Work-related requirements will apply unless she has childcare responsibilities that bring her into a different conditionality group (under 3: no work requirements; 3-12: work-preparation and limited work-search; 13+: full conditionality).

Common mistakes that cost claimants money

Not reporting self-employed earnings the right way

Self-employed claimants report actual cash in and cash out each month through the journal. Missing the reporting deadline can freeze your payment. Forgetting to deduct allowable expenses pushes your assessed income up and your award down. The minimum income floor (an assumed level of earnings, applied after 12 months) is a particularly painful edge case: if your actual earnings are below it, DWP treats you as earning the floor, and your UC is calculated as though you earned more than you did.

Confusing monthly pay periods with UC assessment periods

Your assessment period is a rolling month starting on the date you first claimed. If your employer reports two paydays inside a single assessment period (common if you're paid on the 28th and the 28th falls early in one assessment period and late in the next), you'll see one low UC payment and one high one. This is expected behaviour — not an error — but worth anticipating.

Not updating childcare costs promptly

The childcare element reimburses up to 85% of paid childcare costs, but you must report the costs within the assessment period in which you paid them. Reporting them late means losing the reimbursement entirely for that month. Keep receipts and upload them to your journal the same week.

Not applying for the LCW or LCWRA element

If you have a health condition limiting your capacity to work, you should be assessed for the LCW (limited capability for work) or LCWRA element. Many claimants don't realise this is something they have to trigger — by sending in a fit note and requesting a Work Capability Assessment. The LCWRA element alone is worth around £4,760 a year.

Forgetting the capital rule when an inheritance or compensation arrives

A lump sum from an inheritance, PPI refund, injury compensation, or divorce settlement is counted as capital immediately. Crossing the £16,000 threshold stops your UC the same month. Some types of compensation (e.g. personal injury trusts) can be disregarded if structured correctly — but the structure has to be in place before the money lands.

Go straight to the official route or the closest related Due to You explainer.

What to have ready before you apply

  • Your National Insurance number.
  • Bank or building society account details for payments in.
  • Payslips for the last 3 months if employed, or up-to-date business accounts if self-employed.
  • Tenancy agreement plus rent schedule (showing rent, any service charges, landlord details).
  • Council tax bill showing the band and the amount charged.
  • Childcare receipts and the childcare provider's Ofsted/Care Inspectorate registration number if you pay for regulated childcare.
  • Fit note from your GP if you have a health condition that affects your ability to work.
  • For couples: both partners' NI numbers, earnings, and ID — UC claims are joint.
  • Immigration status documents if you're not a UK or Irish citizen — Home Office share codes or BRP details.
  • Statements for any savings, investments, or spare-property income in all accounts.

Rates

RateAmountPeriodSource
Carer's element£209.34MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Childcare costs – maximum for 2 or more children£1,836.16MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Childcare costs – maximum for one child£1,071.09MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Child element – first child born before 6 April 2017 (extra amount)£47.94MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Child element – per child£303.94MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Disabled child element – higher amount£514.71MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Disabled child element – lower amount£164.79MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Limited capability for work and work-related activity (LCWRA) element – severe health condition or disability unlikely to change, or nearing end of life£429.80MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Limited capability for work (LCW) element – less severe or condition may improve£217.26MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Standard allowance – Joint claimants, both under 25£528.34MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Standard allowance – Joint claimants, either 25 or over£666.97MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Standard allowance – Single, 25 or over£424.90MONTHLY[GOV.UK]
Standard allowance – Single, under 25£338.58MONTHLY[GOV.UK]

Eligibility criteria include

  • HOUSEHOLD
    If living with a partner, both must claim Universal Credit as a joint household claim, even if the partner is not eligible. How much is received depends on the partner's income and savings. [GOV.UK]
  • AGE
    If only one partner has reached State Pension age, the couple can still claim Universal Credit. The claim stops when both reach State Pension age. [GOV.UK]
  • HOUSEHOLD
    Full-time students can claim Universal Credit if: they live with an eligible partner; they are responsible for a child; they have reached State Pension age and live with a partner below State Pension age; or they have received a Migration Notice letter. [GOV.UK]
  • OTHER
    Students aged 21 or under studying any qualification up to A level or equivalent with no parental support can also claim. [GOV.UK]
  • INCOME
    Claimant must be on a low income or need help with living costs. Could be out of work, working (including self-employed or part time), or unable to work. [GOV.UK]
  • RESIDENCE
    Claimant must live in the UK. [GOV.UK]
  • AGE
    Claimant must be aged 18 or over (with some exceptions for those aged 16 to 17) and under State Pension age. [GOV.UK]
  • CAPITAL
    Claimant must have £16,000 or less in money, savings and investments. [GOV.UK]
  • IMMIGRATION
    EU, EEA or Swiss citizens and their families may also need settled or pre-settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme. [GOV.UK]
  • CAPITAL
    If savings, money and investments are over £6,000, payments are reduced by £4.35 for every £250 between £6,000 and £16,000 (with a further £4.35 taken off for any remaining amount that is not a complete £250). [GOV.UK]
  • DISABILITY
    The higher disability/health condition monthly amount applies where the condition is severe and unlikely to change, or the claimant is nearing the end of life. The lower amount applies where the condition is assessed as less severe or may improve. [GOV.UK]
  • DISABILITY
    If both partners have limited capability for work and work-related activity (LCWRA), only one extra monthly amount is paid (the higher amount if one is eligible for it). [GOV.UK]
  • OTHER
    The carer's element requires the claimant to provide care for at least 35 hours a week to someone who receives a qualifying disability benefit. If both partners care for the same person, only one carer's element is paid. [GOV.UK]
  • OTHER
    Claimants receiving LCWRA cannot also receive the carer's element. [GOV.UK]
  • OTHER
    The disabled child higher element applies to a child receiving the highest rate of DLA care component, the higher rate of PIP daily living, or who is blind or severely sight impaired. The lower element applies to any other rate of DLA or PIP. [GOV.UK]
  • OTHER
    Childcare costs element requires the claimant to be working; for couples, both must be working unless one cannot work due to disability or health condition. Childcare must be from a registered provider. [GOV.UK]
  • DISABILITY
    Full-time students with disabilities or health conditions can claim if assessed as having limited capability for work before starting their course and entitled to PIP, DLA, Attendance Allowance, Armed Forces Independence Payment, ADP, CDP, PADP, or SADLA. [GOV.UK]
  • AGE
    16 or 17 year olds can claim if they have a health condition or disability with medical evidence, are caring for someone with a health or disability-related benefit, are nearing end of life, are responsible for a child, live with an eligible partner with a child, are pregnant expecting in 11 weeks, have had a baby in the last 15 weeks, or have no parental support. [GOV.UK]

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