The success rate for personal independence payment (PIP) claims that get as far as an assessment have continued to fall, according to the latest figures released by the DWP.  The DWP is also failing to keep up with demand in every area of PIP, except for mandatory reconsiderations, which have seen a big improvement in clearance times.

For the quarter ending April 2026, 44% of new claims where an assessment had been completed received an award.  This is a decrease from 50% in April 2025.

Overall, for all new PIP claims the success rate is 37%, a decrease from 43% in April 2025.

New claims currently take 18 weeks to clear, from the date they are received to the date a decision is made, up from 14 weeks a year ago.

The time taken from a claim being sent to an assessment provider to a decision being made has increased from 10 weeks to 13 weeks.

The figures also show that the DWP is failing to keep up with demand in every area of PIP claims and reviews:      

  • 250,000 registrations but only 240,000 clearances for new claims
  • 38,000 changes of circumstance were reported but only 31,000 were cleared
  • 24,000 registrations but only  23,000 clearances for DLA reassessments
  • 130,000 planned award reviews were registered but only 120,000 were cleared

The number of mandatory reconsiderations has also increased, with 74,000 being registered, an increase of 10% on the same period last year.

However, decisions on mandatory reconsiderations is one area where the DWP is improving, with 91,000 being cleared in the latest quarter, an increase of 42%.  It is currently taking an average of 43 days to make a decision, a decrease of 36 days compared to last year.

26% of mandatory reconsiderations led to a change in award.

You can read the latest PIP statistics to April 2026 here.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 15 hours ago
    So I was reassessed for PIP in April and was re-awarded PIP until 2032, this is due to a mixture of Mental and Physical issues, Physical more to do with arthritis of the neck and neck nerve damage which was verified via MRI. So everyone recently awarded PIP will get reassessed straight after Timms' review? then what was the point of reassessing me? 

    It's turning into a dark comedy, you have politicians and the media going on and on about "mild" mental illnesses being barred from PIP yet PIP isn't about what illness you have, it's about how it effects you day to day. The fraud rate is near 0% and they know that so the key is obviously to tighten it, use more evidence, here's a thought for all the politicians out there...for mental health claims hire psychiatry to assess their claims but you wouldn't do that knowing an iron clad diagnosis snookers you.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 11 hours ago
      @JJ Where have you read that people who were recently awarded PIP will be reassessed straight after the Timms Review?  Have you got a source for that please? 
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      · 12 hours ago
      @JJ The plan is to not reassess people early. 
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    · 17 hours ago
    I've said multiple times that undisclosed guidelines given to the assessors is another way for the DWP to cut welfare without any legislation. 
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      · 12 hours ago
      @Scorpion When they do that the courts have a habit of interpreting the legislation differently to the DWP. Causing the DWP to have to do paper checks of all claimants that could be effected by the DWP's mistaken interpretation of the legislation, and back payments of those effected.