What is the Green paper?

The Green Paper is the government’s consultation document about changes it is considering making to Personal Independence Payment (PIP) and universal credit (UC).

It is possible that not all – or not any – of the proposals will actually become law.  With many Labour backbenchers unhappy about cutting benefits, a lot will depend on how much of an outcry the proposals cause.

You can download the Green Paper from this link.

What are the main changes in the Green Paper?

 Personal independence payment

From November 2026, claimants will need to score at least 4 points from a single daily living activity to qualify for the daily living component of PIP, as well as scoring a total of at least 8 points.

So, if you are assessed as meeting 4 descriptors scoring two points each, that will be 8 points, but it will not qualify for an award of the standard rate of the daily living component of PIP.

But if you select one descriptor scoring 4 points and two descriptors scoring 2 points each, that will be 8 points and you will qualify for an award.

In the same way, six two point descriptors will currently qualify for the enhanced rate of PIP daily living, but under the new scoring system it will not qualify for any award of the daily living component

The changes will apply both to new claimants and to existing claimants when their award is reviewed from November 2026 onwards. 

The mobility component will not be affected.

These changes are not being consulted on.

The DWP is consulting on how to support existing PIP claimants who lose their entitlement on review from November 2026.  The possibility of transitional protection is mentioned briefly in the Green Paper as well as ways to ensure that claimants who lose their PIP daily living component have their health and care needs met.

The age at which young people transition from disability living allowance (DLA) to PIP may be raised to 18.

Universal credit

The UC standard allowance for new and existing claims will be increased. This will mean the single person 25+ rate of UC standard allowance increasing by £7 per week, from £91pw in 2024/2025 to £98pw in 2026/2027. 

From April 2026, the LCWRA element (which the Green Paper calls the health element) for existing claimants will be frozen at £97pw until 2029/30, but claimants will benefit from the increased standard allowance.

For new claims from April 2026, the rate of the LCWRA element will be reduced by £47pw, from £97pw in 2024/2025 to £50pw in 2026/2027.  

These changes are not being consulted on.

For people receiving the new reduced UC health element after April 2026, those with the most severe, life-long health conditions, who have no prospect of improvement and will never be able to work, will receive an additional premium.  There are no details yet of how eligibility will be decided or the rate of the new premium.

Access to the health element of UC will be delayed until a claimant is aged 22.

The Green Paper says “we will guarantee that no-one who has been found LCWRA prior to April 2026 and remains LCWRA following reassessment will see their UC health element entitlement changed.” 

From 2028 assessment for the health element of UC will not be based on your ability to work, so there will no longer be an LCWRA category.  So it is not clear whether this guarantee means that they will not be affected ever or whether it means they will be protected until the WCA is abolished in 2028 and replaced by the PIP daily living component assessment. 

People on the health element of UC will be expected, as a minimum, to participate in periodic conversations about work and support (with exceptions where this would not be appropriate). If someone does not attend or engage in a planned conversation, the DWP will seek to understand the reasons before benefits are affected.  In other words, sanctions can be applied to people in this group.  However, the green paper says that "as now, we do not envisage the requirement on this group extending to undertaking specific work related activity or to look for work or take jobs."

Work capability Assessment

The WCA is to be scrapped in 2028 and a new single assessment system introduced.  

The DWP are not consulting on this change.

Under the new system, any extra financial support for health conditions (including PIP, ESA or UC health) will be assessed via a single assessment which will be based on the PIP assessment – considering the impact of disability on daily living, not on capacity to work.

According to the Green Paper, only 63% of people currently receiving the health element of UC or ESA are also in receipt of PIP or DLA.

Reassessments for UC and ESA will be resumed until the WCA is scrapped, with exceptions for those who will never work and those under special rules for end-of-life care. Reassessments have largely been switched off since 2021.

A "Right To Try Guarantee" will be introduced, which will guarantee that attempting work will never lead to a benefits reassessment.

New Style JSA and ESA

New Style Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) and New Style Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) will be replaced with a new single entitlement called Unemployment Insurance.  It will be paid at the ESA rate (currently £138pw) and will be time-limited. 

People claiming Unemployment Insurance will be expected to actively seek work with ”easments” for those with work-limiting health conditions. 

It is not clear how it will be decided if a claimant has a work-limiting health condition, as the WCA is being abolished.

After the, as yet unquantified, time-limit on Unemployment Insurance has expired, claimants will have to attempt to claim UC.

Assessments

There will be a greater proportion of face-to-face assessments for PIP, UC and ESA.

Reassessments for UC and ESA will be restarted prior to abolishing the WCA (see WCA above).

People with the most severe disabilities or with health conditions that will never improve will never be reassessed.

Assessments will be recorded by default.

There will be a review of the PIP assessment “involving experts, stakeholders and disabled people to consider how it needs to adapt for the future.”

How long will the changes take?

The consultation ends on 30 June 2025. 

However, because the DWP has chosen not to consult on most of the major issues, including the changes to PIP scoring and the freezing of the health element of UC, it does not have to wait until the consultation ends before bringing forward new legislation for these changes.  The DWP have said they want to introduce legislation in this session of parliament, which ends on 21 July.

So it is possible legislation to enact some of the changes, especially to PIP scoring, could be introduced as early as May to try to prevent opposition to the cuts building.

The change to PIP scoring would still not take effect until November 2026, but the law enabling it could be firmly in place very much sooner.

For the limited range of proposals which are being consulted on, a White Paper will be published later this year with legislation to follow.  In addition, details of the scrapping of the WCA and the use of the PIP assessment to assess entitlement for the UC health element will be set out in the White Paper, although they will not have been consulted on.

 

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 days ago
    I am confused by the washing section.
    0 points if you can’t wash waist down.
    0 points if you can’t wash hair.
    4 points if you can’t wash shoulders to waist.  
    I thought most people would struggle more with first two.
    Am I interpreting this all wrong?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @Christine If you cant wash shoulders to waist surely you can't wash you hair either? This is ridiculous.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Christine Basically what they are saying is IF you are truly disabled then you won't be able to do the easiest part shoulders to waist. 
      In other words unless you are pretty much paralysed you won't be able to claim pip daily living as you won't get 4 points for any of the daily tasks
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Christine I don't know how the first 2 score 0 but the last is a 4 because that should be the easiest and if you can't do that you can't wash yourself at all. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 days ago
    I am a pensioner receiving PIP. My scores were 2's. No 4's. I dont recieve mobility. I have a letter saying that I will not be reviewed until 2029. Does this mean I lose out from November 26 because of the rules change?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Augustus But is ongoing the same as indefinite? Let's be honest, if you have no 4's and no indefinite award, the chance are your award is going to be reviewed at some point and if no 4s then no daily living component.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Allan I should think that your review will change from 2029. Like my husbands
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @Allan 4 points if you can't wash between shoulders and waist is because it's easier than washing below the waist ,if you can't do the easier one you obviously have bigger problems than if  you can't wash below the waist 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Augustus i hope this will be the case.mine is ongoing too,(enhanced both elements) 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Allan I’d double check by first checking if your award is considered ongoing. If so, it must be, like me, that it is thought that your condition(s) will never improve. And they have said that those in such a position will not, in future, be put through a review again.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 days ago
    I wonder what will happen to those pensioners who are still on PIP, and would normally have a 10 year light touch assessment...?      When DLA was changed to PIP, pensioners were told they would now be left alone and require no more assessments, keeping their DLA.   Will the same thing happen here?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Dyanne
      Dyanne, I am a 77 year old pensioner still on D.L.A. indefinitely.  I was born before 8 April 1948.  Am sure that they will start on us older ones too.
      I hope not but it would appear that nothing is sacred now!
      I really do not know what will happen?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 days ago
    So people on lcwra have now got to look for work? 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Db123 NO  no  no if u claim (lcwra now 2025 ) be frozen £416  to 2029 ish .  from 2026  we merge HELATH ELETNMENT UC ..  BUT POSS FROM 2028  contact perodic  dwp . MAY OFFER  guareetee work trial  VOLUNTARY  DONT HAVE EXCEPT / NO SANCTIONS if we dont   . BUT WE  do will have  have perodic contact  as when via journall / phone .  Unlike now  left alone as (lcwra) = unfit for work realated activity . 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Db123 @ Db123 - No
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Db123 yes and no. If you don't get PIP and score 4 points in one daily living, you won't get LCWRA. So you will be living off £400 a month, and that will force you back to work. But they can't "make" you go back
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Db123 NO  
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 days ago
    It will be interesting to see what happens when they try to merge the Contributory benefits because every time they tried to mess with them in the past they got bogged down in the International Agreements (and that was before the Brexit WA!).  People abroad cannot claim UC after any time limit ends and they are not supposed to discriminate against people living abroad.  They will have to have an exportable invalidity benefit for foreigners who have paid NI Contributions.   They are also not saying how people are going to be assessed for this new benefit once they axe the WCA, nor how they are going to assess those who are going to get the UC 'premium' for more severe illnesses.  It's all half thought through back of a fag packet stuff.  You really have to wonder if it's not all just spin so Reeves can save her own job by trying to keep the OBR quiet.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 days ago
    My PIP renewal is due March 2026. I didn't score 4 on any descriptor for Daily Living, yet have an enhanced award. If my renewal award stayed the same and I didn't score 4 for any descriptor would I then need another assessment in November 2026 or would I be given the duration of my new award before being assessed under the new rules? 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 days ago
    Where adaptions and aids were used in daily living , will this no longer count as it now only says assistance 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 days ago
    How can our U.K. Parliament sit back and permit such changes without the DWP being consulted . This sounds like an inside behind closed doors green paper to cut costs to disabled as our government too much red tape to make curs elsewhere . The cost to this government in 2026 onwards by cutting  daily living applicants past or present will result in extreme high costs re tribunal hearings 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 days ago
    test post
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 days ago
    Does this mean that if you get PIP daily living now, but will lose it under the 4 point rule at the next assessment, you will then also automatically lose all the universal credit health element benefit?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Bern400 YES  for (NEW)   claims after 2028 (PROPOSED )    BUT OLDER  claims b4 2025 ( lcwra ) current  merge with health eletnment  2026 . WE GET FROZEN £416 TO 2029/ 2030 . 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Amber NOT  if you claim & get £416  lcwra mouth now  B4 2026  + basic uc + house eletnment  b4 2026   ////// if u only got pip no (lcwra ) uc now . LOSE  pip daily living  problem after 2028  BE ISSUIE      lcwra now 2025 merge 2026 called uc health eletnment  carry on get £416 frozen lcwra .   BUT  to get health eletnment after 2028 PROPOSED ONLY ATM  u have to be awarded  DAILY PIP  ELETNMENT   NO MORE WCA UC50 AFTER 2028 PROPOSED . 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Amber I think that’s a yes to your question , because they are going to use the pip 4 point as the gateway for the UC health element 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 days ago
      @Liz when the WCA is scrapped, the health element (LWRCA) of UC will be assessed using the PIP daily living criteria  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 days ago
      @Amber Yes and anybody caring for you will also lose their carer's allowance 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 12 days ago
    I have recently been given an award for an Ongoing period, but without 4 points in one Section. 11 points across five Sections
    Will I be payed for ten years   
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Jenny NEW / REVEIW CLAIMS AFTER 2026     B4 THAT PIP OK 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Michele So everyone is going to be reassessed ?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Jayne It’s from November 2026 not this year. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 days ago
      @Pete No you will be reassessed like everyone else whether your pip award was recent or old 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 days ago
      @Pete I’m in the same situation as you I spoke to CSA they advised waiting until things were clearer but their view was reassessment of people without 4 points if passed by the government woukd mean from November of this year you would lose your entitlement even if your award was for 3/5/10 years with time to run. 
      And also once your pip daily living alliwance was revoked your eligibility for the WCA payment would also be reviewed. 
      So worrying for us all I feel and no real answers of what comes next or transition process 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 12 days ago
    The article doesnt make sense ? says ' From April 2026, the UC health element will be frozen at £97pw until 2029/30.'
    Yet further reading says it will be '  to £98pw in 2026/2027' ... So is it going to be £97 or £98 from April 2026 ?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Confused YES  OLD CLAIMS  LCWRA   B4  APRIL 2026 FROZEN .  £416 MOUTH  £97/£98  WEEK  DEPENDS ON 28 WEEK/ 31 WEEK INMOUTH  TO 2029/ 2030  BUT  (NEW)  new claims from 2026- 2028, end wca  get lwr rate £50 week .  FROM  2026  lcwra / known health eletnment uc . FROM  april 2028  PROPOSED  wca go to get health eletnment on  uc NEW  claims  from 2028    pass pip assetnment daily living compound . 2026 & b4 old claims lcwra stay on £416 frozen mouth .
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Confused UC will be £98 and UC Health element or limited capability will be £97 .. I think 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 13 days ago
    I'm really confused with all this. I'm on ESA and haven had a letter to go on Universal Credit yet. I've been told to wait until I get a letter then go over but that my money will be the same and then when everyone else's money goes up mine will go down. But if the support group bit of Universal Credit is being cut, will mine be cut to £50 a week Even though it's not my fault I've not moved over with being told to wait? Or if I'm on my same money as I am now how will my money go down when others go up every year when Universal Credit is being cut for a few years? Will I be on the same money for a few years with these changes or will it still go down every year? And will I be assessed for PIP earlier because my next PIP isn't for two years. And I don't know what they mean about the most severe disability. I've got a few disabilities but I don't know if they're classed as severe because I've had them all my life. Sorry I hope it makes sense. I've got a learning disability so I don't know if you can understand how my head has thought about things. I'm just going round in circles trying to understand what money I'm going to be on and worrying about everything because I'm not able to work 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @Bern400 Thank you for your reply. That's made me feel a bit better about things and has helped me to understand things better. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @J I have read your post as far as I am aware that if you move over to UC you have protected rights. If you are in the support group you will move over to all none related work activities. I believe your payments should be the same as you get now. I have received this information directly from them. By law that cannot pay you less than you get now. If you get reassessed that maybe this will happen. I don’t think you should to be reassessed if nothing changes or if it had they can reassess you on your PIP letter. I was reassessed last September over the phone for 3 hours extremely stressful. If you cannot go to a medical centre to have this assessment you can request it at home. Always record it and tell them before hand you are doing this. From experience the assessment it not carried out by a proper doctor and most don’t have experience in all medical issues. I do feel that these changes are not acceptable and hope the House of Lords and the courts change them. I feel extremely disappointed in the Labour Party. They are worse than the last lot.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Bern400 Great reply! Thank you for your clear answer! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 days ago
      @Bern400 thanks very much. This is so helpful. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 days ago
      @J ✅ 1. ESA to Universal Credit – What’s Happening?
      You’re right — if you're on income-related ESA, you’ll eventually be moved to Universal Credit (UC) through something called “managed migration.”

      You don’t need to move until you get a letter from the DWP (called a Migration Notice).

      Once you get that letter, you’ll have 3 months to make a claim for Universal Credit.

      Until then, your ESA continues as normal.

      👉 You’re doing the right thing by waiting until you get the letter. Don’t switch early unless advised by someone who’s checked your situation carefully (like a welfare advisor).

      💷 2. Will Your Money Go Down?
      This part is complicated — but here’s the key info:

      🔹 When you move to UC, you’ll get:
      Your usual UC amount, plus

      A “transitional protection” top-up if UC pays less than your current ESA.

      This top-up keeps your money at the same level as it was on ESA at the time you move over. You won’t suddenly drop to £50/week.

      🔸 However:
      This top-up is frozen — it doesn’t rise with inflation.

      So others on UC might get more each year, but your total payment stays the same until UC rates catch up to your old amount.

      You’re not losing money straight away — you just don’t get increases for a while.

      ✅ Example:
      If your ESA is £800/month and UC only gives £750/month, they top it up to £800.
      Next year, others on UC might get £770 (because of increases), but you stay at £800.
      Eventually, their standard rate goes past £800 — and then your transitional top-up ends.

      ⚠️ About the £50/week:
      That figure is likely from worries about the planned cut to the Limited Capability for Work-Related Activity (LCWRA) element in UC, but:

      That change will only affect new claims or people not protected by transitional rules.

      If you’re in the Support Group on ESA, when you move to UC, you’ll be placed in the LCWRA group, which gives extra money.

      You will keep that element — or receive transitional protection if they change it — so you will not suddenly be reduced to £50/week.

      🧾 3. What Happens Over Time?
      You won’t be left with no money.

      You may stay on roughly the same money for a few years, while others' benefits slowly increase.

      Eventually, your transitional protection will shrink (as standard UC amounts rise) or end (if a condition changes).

      If they change how support is paid (e.g., remove LCWRA), your protection should continue as long as your claim stays the same.

      🧠 4. What About PIP?
      PIP is separate from ESA or Universal Credit.

      You said you’re not due for a review for 2 years — that should still stand, unless your condition changes or DWP changes the system.

      There have been talks about PIP reform (like linking it to the “most severe” disabilities), but no changes are confirmed yet, and nothing will happen without consultation.

      Having lifelong or multiple disabilities doesn’t automatically mean you’re not severe enough. If your condition affects your daily life or mobility, you may still qualify.

      👉 You won’t be reassessed early for PIP just because you move to UC.

      🔎 What does “most severe disability” mean?
      Right now, it’s not a legal definition. The government is consulting on future changes, like possibly focusing higher support on people with the most significant or lifelong needs.

      You said you’ve had your disabilities your whole life — that could well count in your favour, especially if they cause serious impact. But there’s no new rule in place yet.

      📌 Summary:
      ✅ Don’t move to UC until you get the DWP letter.

      ✅ You’ll not lose money straight away – you’ll get transitional protection to keep your payments the same.

      ⚠️ You might not get increases every year, so your money could feel like less over time.

      ❌ You will not be dropped to £50/week if you’re in the Support Group or LCWRA group.

      💡 PIP is separate — no early reassessments just because of UC move.

      🧠 “Severe disability” isn’t clearly defined yet — your lifelong conditions could qualify.

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 13 days ago
    Interesting break down.. 

    Any leaked documents / information on the possible additional premium replacing 
    UC health element/support group payment 
    "will receive an additional premium.

    And people on new style ESA in the support group how are they effected. .. with 
    'a time limit 

    Otherwise it's a clear breakdown 
    Considering this green paper is only clear on cuts! cuts! 
    and no real answers on mitigating these loses!

    Just my twopence worth.. those with health issues not classed as likely to never improve.. it appears they will be time limited and assessed more often.. ..

    My thought with that is given there's already backlogs in assessing surly this would create more! 
    And DWP / private assessment companies aren't recruiting for help with the extra assessments this green paper appears will generate..

    This approach and attitude puts me in mind of when reading a few years ago of the American welfare assessment system were by claimants were facing from 3-5 years of backlogs .. and many benefit payments weren't paid till a decision was made!
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