TO YOUR CREDIT

Urgent warning for nearly half a million on benefits ahead of major change coming in weeks – or risk payments stopping

HUNDREDS of thousands of people on benefits should look for letters in the post starting from next month - or they could risk losing cash.

It comes as the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) moves those on tax credits over to Universal Credit.

Advertisement
Hundreds of thousands of households on tax credits will be moved to Universal Credit by the end of 2024

From August, 244,800 letters will start going out to households in four English regions inviting them to make the move.

This figure is crunched from government data and is based on the number of households in these regions still claiming tax credits.

But these claimants will be asked to claim Universal Credit instead, under a process known as managed migration.

They will continue to receive the payments that they are entitled to once moved to Universal Credit, according to the DWP.

Advertisement

Those on tax credit who live in any of the following locations should get ready to check their post in August:

  • West Yorkshire
  • Staffordshire
  • Derbyshire
  • South London

Once you receive a letter, you'll have three months to move over.

If you fail to do this within the allotted time frame, you could lose your benefit payments.

Most read in Money

BILL SAVE
Major supermarket slashes prices on 100 essentials to match Aldi and Lidl
BAR HUMBUG
Wetherspoons bans drinkers standing AT THE BAR leaving punters fuming
BANG OUT OF ORDER
New Year’s Eve error that could land you with a £5,000 fine
IN THE MIX
We tested pre-mixed cocktails to ring in the New Year… the winner was just £9

Over two million people are still on old-style legacy benefits, but the government plans to move the majority of them onto Universal Credit by the end of 2024.

Advertisement

In most cases, individuals will be better off following a move from legacy benefits to Universal Credit.

But 300,000 could be worse off, and should not move until they are asked to so their payments are protected, or they could lose cash.

Where an individual's Universal Credit payment is lower than their legacy benefits entitlement, they will usually be entitled to a top-up payment known as Transitional Protection

This means that their Universal Credit entitlement will be the same as their legacy benefit entitlement at the point they move.

Advertisement
Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com