Benefits & Support

Pension Credit Savings Limit — How Savings Affect Your Claim

How savings and capital affect Pension Credit in 2026. Covers the £10,000 disregard, tariff income rules, what counts as savings, and why there's no upper savings limit for Guarantee Credit.

Benefits information is based on current DWP and HMRC rules. Entitlements depend on your personal circumstances. For free personalised help, contact Citizens Advice or call the Universal Credit helpline on 0800 328 5644.

Unlike most means-tested benefits, Pension Credit has no upper savings limit. Here’s exactly how your savings affect your claim.

The Key Rule: No Upper Limit

Benefit Savings Limit
Universal Credit £16,000 (over this = no UC)
Housing Benefit £16,000
Income-based JSA/ESA £16,000
Pension Credit (Guarantee) No limit

This is one of Pension Credit’s most generous features. You could have £100,000 in savings and still receive Pension Credit, though the tariff income would reduce your payment.

How Savings Are Assessed

The Three Bands

Savings How They’re Treated
Up to £10,000 Fully ignored — no effect on your claim
£10,001 to £16,000 Tariff income applies — £1/week per £500
Over £16,000 Tariff income continues — still no cut-off

Tariff Income Calculation

For every £500 (or part of £500) of savings above £10,000, you’re treated as having £1/week of income.

Your Savings Tariff Income Annual Assumed Income
£10,000 £0/week £0
£10,250 £1/week £52
£11,000 £2/week £104
£15,000 £10/week £520
£20,000 £20/week £1,040
£30,000 £40/week £2,080
£50,000 £80/week £4,160

Worked Example

Single person, State Pension £170/week, savings £25,000:

Step Calculation
Appropriate amount £218.15/week
State Pension income £170/week
Excess savings (£25,000 - £10,000) £15,000
Tariff income (£15,000 ÷ £500 × £1) £30/week
Total counted income £200/week
Guarantee Credit £18.15/week (£943.80/year)

Even with £25,000 in savings, this person still receives nearly £1,000/year in Pension Credit — plus they unlock other benefits worth potentially more.

What Counts as Savings

Counted

Asset Counted?
Bank accounts Yes
Building society accounts Yes
Cash ISAs Yes
Stocks and shares ISAs Yes
Premium Bonds Yes
Shares and investments Yes (current value)
Investment bonds Yes
National Savings certificates Yes
Money held abroad Yes
Property (not your home) Yes — at market value
Cash Yes

Not Counted

Asset Counted?
Your home (the one you live in) No
Personal possessions (furniture, car, jewellery) No
Business assets (if self-employed) No
Surrender value of life insurance No
Money held in trust for you (some types) Depends
Arrears of benefits Not counted for 52 weeks
Personal injury compensation Not counted for 52 weeks (then assessed)
Certain ex-gratia payments No

Joint Savings

For couples, all savings are added together, regardless of whose name the account is in. The combined total is then assessed against the £10,000 threshold.

Deprivation of Capital

What It Means

If you deliberately reduce your savings to get more Pension Credit, DWP can treat you as still having that money. This is called “notional capital.”

What Counts as Deprivation

Action Likely Deprivation?
Giving £20,000 to your children to qualify Yes
Transferring savings into a partner’s name (if known) Yes
Buying expensive items you don’t need Possibly
Spending savings on normal living costs No
Paying off your mortgage No — legitimate use
Paying for home repairs No — legitimate use
Paying a debt No — legitimate use
Paying for a holiday Generally no — normal expenditure

How DWP Investigates

  • They look at your financial history
  • They consider the timing (savings reduced just before claiming)
  • They assess whether the purpose was to qualify for/increase benefits
  • The burden of proof is on DWP, but they can infer intent from circumstances

Pension Credit and the Value of Qualifying

Even a small Pension Credit award unlocks significant additional benefits:

Passport Benefit Annual Value
Council Tax Reduction (up to 100%) £1,000-£2,500
Free TV licence (if 75+) £169.50
Warm Home Discount £150
Cold Weather Payments £25/week during cold spells
Housing Benefit (if not on UC) £1,000-£8,000+
Free NHS dental treatment £200-£300+
Free NHS sight tests and vouchers £50-£100+
Help with health travel costs Variable

The total value of passport benefits can be worth far more than the Pension Credit payment itself.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Pension Credit