A total £98 per week for a single person aged over 25. That is what the basic rate of universal credit will increase to in April 2026.
You would be forgiven for thinking this amount must be based on an assessment of what a person needs to get by in the UK today. That would be the logical foundation for our social security system. But you would be wrong.
Our social security system – for most people, universal credit – is a vital public service and one of the founding pillars of the modern welfare state. Many of us will use universal credit at some point. If we lose our job or become unwell it should cover our living costs while we get back on our feet. If we are trapped in low-paid or insecure work, it should be there to top-up our income. But, right now, it is failing to adequately protect people.
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The Joseph Rowntree Foundation regularly tracks the impact of the cost of living crisis on low-income families. Our most recent survey found five in six families on universal credit had gone without essentials in the first half of this year. That means going without basics like food, heating and toiletries.
This may seem a shockingly high figure to some. But we have seen a decade of cuts and freezes to our social security system, followed by a pandemic that saw the incomes of the worst off hit the hardest, and a cost of living crisis that has sent the cost of essentials like energy and food sky-high. So perhaps it’s not so much of a shock.