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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Politics
Rachael Burford

Britain's ballooning benefits bill: Universal Credit claimants hit record high of eight million people

Universal Credit claimants are at the highest level since the it was introduced in 2013 -

A record eight million people in Britain now claim Universal Credit, new figures have revealed.

It is the highest level it has been since the benefit was introduced in 2013, according to official data published on Tuesday.

Nearly half of those claiming are not expected to work because of long-term sickness, caring duties or being over the pension age, data shows.

Claimants jumped by more than a million in a year – from 6.9 million people in July last year, the figures from the Office for National Statistics reveal.

UC is a payment to help with living costs and is available for people in work who are on low incomes, as well as those who are out of work or cannot work.

The steep rise in the past year has been driven almost entirely by people who are not required to work, with 3.7 million in this category in July – a rise of 39% or 1 million since the same time in 2024.

People in this bracket can include full time students, those over the state pension age, someone with a child aged under one, and those considered to have no prospect of work.

The capital, which has the highest rate of unemployment in the UK, has more than 364,000 people claiming benefits - one of the highest numbers of any region.

The number of claimants in London has risen 2.8% since July 2024.

The Labour Government has previously said it “inherited a broken welfare system and spiralling, unsustainable benefits bill” from the Conservatives, and is working on reforms including tightening rules on who can claim UC.

The number of working people on UC rose to 2.2 million in July, up slightly from 2.1 million 12 months previously.

Last month, a breakdown of UC claimants by immigration status was published for the first time.

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) said it had published the statistics “following a public commitment to investigate and develop breakdowns of the UC caseload by the immigration status of foreign nationals in receipt of UC”.

The latest data for July is largely unchanged from the previous month, again showing that the majority (83.8%) of claimants were British and Irish nationals and those who live or work in the UK without any immigration restrictions.

Of this group, 99.9% are UK citizens and around a third were in work, the DWP said.

Almost one in 10 (9.6%) people on UC were those with EU Settlement Scheme settled status who have a right to reside in the UK, while 2.7% were people who had indefinite leave to remain in the UK.

Refugees accounted for 1.5% of UC claimants, while 0.7% were people who had come by safe and legal humanitarian routes including under the Ukraine and Afghan resettlement schemes.

Around 0.9% of those on UC had limited leave to remain in the UK, covering those with temporary immigration status, while the rest were either no longer receiving UC payments or had no immigration status recorded on digital systems, the DWP said.

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