A coalition of more than 30 organisations has written to minister Liz Kendall demanding the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) stops forcibly recovering debts from hundreds of thousands of benefit claimants caused by its own mistakes.
Freedom of Information data sourced by Public Law Project, the law firm that organised the letter, show that in 2023/2024, 686,756 new “official error” universal credit overpayment debts – which are incurred when a claimant is paid too much benefit due to mistakes by the DWP – were entered on the department’s Debt Manager system.
The DWP is then able to recover these “overpaid” benefits – sometimes to the value of tens of thousands of pounds – by cutting the claimant’s future universal credit by up to a quarter of the basic payment, known as the ‘standard allowance’.
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In one case mentioned in the letter, the state pension-age member of a mixed-age couple, who cares for his disabled son and has a partner with no recourse to public funds, was repeatedly and wrongly advised to claim universal credit by DWP officials. The DWP later noticed their mistake and stopped his claim, resulting in an overpayment debt of more than £38,000.
“No one is expecting the DWP not to make mistakes,” said Shameem Ahmad, chief executive of the Public Law Project. “However, it is incumbent on the department to take responsibility for those mistakes, rather than pushing that burden onto people it should in fact be supporting.
“These official payment errors have real and highly detrimental consequences for people – causing sudden financial pressures and anxieties, through no fault of their own.