The two-child limit is one of the most misunderstood benefit rules. Here’s what it actually affects — and critically, what it doesn’t.
What the Two-Child Limit Is (and Isn’t)
| Benefit | Two-Child Limit Applies? |
|---|---|
| Child Benefit | No — paid for every child |
| UC child element | Yes — only first two children born after April 2017 |
| Child Tax Credit child element | Yes — same rule |
| Free school meals | No |
| Healthy Start vouchers | No |
| Scottish Child Payment | No — paid per child |
| Sure Start Maternity Grant | N/A — one-off payment |
Child Benefit vs UC Child Element
These are two completely separate benefits:
| Feature | Child Benefit | UC Child Element |
|---|---|---|
| Who qualifies | Anyone responsible for a child under 16 (or under 20 in education) | UC claimants with children |
| Two-child limit | No | Yes (for children born after 6 April 2017) |
| Amount per child | £26.05/week (eldest), £17.25/week (others) | £287.92/month per child |
| Means-tested | No (but HICBC applies above £60,000) | Yes — income reduces UC |
| How to claim | CH2 form to HMRC | Part of your UC claim |
Child Benefit Rates for All Children
Child Benefit is paid for every qualifying child at the following rates:
| Child | Weekly Rate 2026-27 | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Eldest/only child | £26.05 | £1,354.60 |
| Each additional child | £17.25 | £897.00 |
Examples
| Family Size | Weekly Total | Annual Total |
|---|---|---|
| 1 child | £26.05 | £1,354.60 |
| 2 children | £43.30 | £2,251.60 |
| 3 children | £60.55 | £3,148.60 |
| 4 children | £77.80 | £4,045.60 |
| 5 children | £95.05 | £4,942.60 |
No limit — every additional child adds £17.25/week.
The UC Two-Child Limit in Detail
The UC two-child limit only affects the child element within Universal Credit:
- Children born before 6 April 2017 are not subject to the limit
- Only third and subsequent children born after that date are affected
- The child element is worth £287.92/month (£3,455/year) per child
Financial Impact
A family with 3 children (all born after April 2017):
| Benefit | With Limit | Without Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Child Benefit | £60.55/week for all 3 | Same |
| UC child element | £575.84/month (2 children) | £863.76/month (3 children) |
| Monthly difference | £287.92 less | |
| Annual difference | £3,455 less |
Exceptions to the UC Two-Child Limit
| Exception | Details |
|---|---|
| Multiple births | One child from the birth counts against the limit, additional multiples are exempt |
| Adoption from local authority | Adopted child is exempt from the count |
| Kinship care | Child placed with you who would otherwise be in care |
| Non-consensual conception | Third-party professional evidence required, must not be living with the perpetrator |
| Non-parental caring | Child previously in a different household |
What to Do If You Have Three or More Children
- Always claim Child Benefit for all children — there’s no limit
- Claim UC for all children — even if the third doesn’t get a child element, they may affect your housing element bedroom entitlement
- Check for exceptions — Does any of the exceptions above apply to your third or later children?
- Claim NI credits — Child Benefit provides NI credits regardless of the two-child limit
- Check Scottish benefits — The Scottish Child Payment (£26.70/week per child under 16) has no two-child limit