Benefits & Support

PIP Daily Living Component Rates 2026 — How Much Can You Get?

PIP daily living component rates for 2026-27 explained. Covers standard and enhanced rates, what activities are assessed, how points work, and how to qualify for each rate.

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.

The PIP daily living component helps with the extra costs of looking after yourself when you have a health condition or disability. Here’s what each rate pays in 2026-27 and how to qualify.

PIP Daily Living Rates 2026-27

Rate Weekly 4-Weekly Monthly Equivalent
Standard rate £72.65 £290.60 £314.82
Enhanced rate £108.55 £434.20 £470.37

PIP is paid every 4 weeks, not monthly. The rates above increased in April 2026 in line with inflation.

How Points Work

The daily living component is assessed across 10 activities. You score points based on how much difficulty you have with each one. Your total points determine your rate:

Total Points Rate Awarded
0-7 points No award
8-11 points Standard rate (£72.65/week)
12+ points Enhanced rate (£108.55/week)

You only score the highest applicable descriptor for each activity — points don’t stack within a single activity.

The 10 Daily Living Activities

Activity 1: Preparing Food

This assesses your ability to prepare and cook a simple meal from fresh ingredients.

Descriptor Points
Can prepare and cook a simple meal unaided 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance to prepare or cook a simple meal 2
Cannot cook a simple meal using a conventional cooker but can using a microwave 2
Needs prompting to prepare or cook a simple meal 2
Needs supervision or assistance to prepare or cook a simple meal 4
Cannot prepare and cook food 8

Key point: A “simple meal” means a cooked one-course meal for one using fresh ingredients — not a ready meal or sandwich.

Activity 2: Taking Nutrition

This assesses your ability to eat and drink.

Descriptor Points
Can take nutrition unaided 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance to take nutrition, or needs supervision, prompting, or assistance to take nutrition 2
Needs a therapeutic source to take nutrition 2
Needs prompting to take nutrition 4
Needs assistance to manage a therapeutic source of nutrition 6
Cannot convey food and drink to mouth and needs another person to do so 10

Activity 3: Managing Therapy or Monitoring a Health Condition

This covers managing medication, monitoring conditions (like blood sugar), and doing therapy or exercises prescribed by a health professional.

Descriptor Points
Either does not need therapy or monitoring, or can manage it unaided 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance to manage therapy or monitor condition 1
Needs supervision, prompting, or assistance to manage therapy or monitor condition 1
Needs supervision, prompting, or assistance to manage therapy that takes no more than 3.5 hours a week 2
Needs supervision, prompting, or assistance to manage therapy that takes more than 3.5 but no more than 7 hours a week 4
Needs supervision, prompting, or assistance to manage therapy that takes more than 7 but no more than 14 hours a week 6
Needs supervision, prompting, or assistance to manage therapy that takes more than 14 hours a week 8

Key point: This includes any therapy recommended by a doctor, nurse, or other health professional — physiotherapy exercises, breathing exercises, dialysis, managing stoma care, wound dressings, and similar.

Activity 4: Washing and Bathing

This assesses your ability to wash your whole body.

Descriptor Points
Can wash and bathe unaided 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance to wash or bathe 2
Needs supervision or prompting to wash or bathe 2
Needs assistance to wash either hair or body below the waist 2
Needs assistance to wash body between shoulders and waist 4
Cannot wash and bathe at all and needs another person to wash entire body 8

Key point: “Washing” means being able to do so to an acceptable standard of hygiene. If you can physically wash but miss areas, or can only manage some days, you may score points.

Activity 5: Managing Toilet Needs or Incontinence

Descriptor Points
Can manage toilet needs or incontinence unaided 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance to manage toilet needs or incontinence 2
Needs supervision or prompting to manage toilet needs 2
Needs assistance to manage toilet needs 4
Needs assistance to manage incontinence of either bladder or bowel 6
Needs assistance to manage incontinence of both bladder and bowel 8

Activity 6: Dressing and Undressing

Descriptor Points
Can dress and undress unaided 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance to dress or undress 2
Needs prompting or assistance to dress or undress lower body 2
Needs prompting or assistance to dress or undress upper body 4
Cannot dress or undress at all 8

Key point: This includes selecting appropriate clothing. If you need prompting to dress appropriately for the weather or occasion, that counts.

Activity 7: Communicating Verbally

This assesses your ability to express and understand spoken information.

Descriptor Points
Can express and understand verbal information unaided 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance to express or understand verbal information 2
Needs communication support to express or understand complex verbal information 4
Needs communication support to express or understand basic verbal information 8
Cannot express or understand verbal information at all, even with support 12

Activity 8: Reading and Understanding Signs, Symbols, and Words

Descriptor Points
Can read and understand basic and complex written information 0
Needs to use an aid or appliance (other than glasses) to read or understand written information 2
Needs prompting to read or understand complex written information 2
Needs prompting to read or understand basic written information 4
Cannot read or understand signs, symbols, or words 8

Key point: “Basic” written information means signs and symbols like safety signs, or simple sentences. “Complex” means more than one sentence of written information.

Activity 9: Engaging with Other People Face-to-Face

This assesses your ability to engage socially, particularly relevant for mental health conditions, autism, and learning disabilities.

Descriptor Points
Can engage with other people unaided 0
Needs prompting to engage with other people 2
Needs social support to engage with other people 4
Cannot engage with other people due to overwhelming psychological distress 8

Key point: “Social support” means support from someone trained or experienced in helping people engage socially — not just a companion.

Activity 10: Making Budgeting Decisions

This assesses simple financial decisions, not complex budgeting.

Descriptor Points
Can manage complex budgeting decisions unaided 0
Needs prompting or assistance to make complex budgeting decisions 2
Needs prompting or assistance to make simple budgeting decisions 4
Cannot make any budgeting decisions 6

Key point: A “simple budgeting decision” means things like paying for an item at a shop. “Complex” means things like planning weekly expenditure or managing a household budget.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Standard Rate Award (9 points)

Activity Descriptor Points
Preparing food Needs prompting 2
Washing and bathing Needs assistance below waist 2
Dressing Needs assistance lower body 2
Managing therapy Needs help 1-3.5 hours/week 2
Engaging with others Can engage unaided 0
Total 8

Result: Standard rate — £72.65/week

Example 2: Enhanced Rate Award (14 points)

Activity Descriptor Points
Preparing food Cannot prepare and cook food 8
Washing and bathing Needs assistance between shoulders and waist 4
Managing toilet needs Needs assistance 4
Communicating Can communicate unaided 0
Total 16

Result: Enhanced rate — £108.55/week

What “Reliably” Means

When the DWP assesses your activities, they consider whether you can do them:

Reliably Means Examples
Safely Without risk of falling, burning yourself, or other harm
To an acceptable standard Properly washed, not just splashing water; food cooked safely
Repeatedly More than once if needed — not just on good days
In a reasonable time Roughly twice as long as someone without a condition

If you can technically do an activity but not reliably, you should score points for needing help or supervision.

Claiming Both Components

You can claim both the daily living and mobility component at the same time. They are assessed separately, and qualifying for one doesn’t affect your entitlement to the other.

Maximum PIP Award 2026-27

Components Weekly 4-Weekly Annual
Enhanced daily living + enhanced mobility £184.30 £737.20 £9,583.60

What Daily Living PIP Unlocks

Unlike the mobility component, the daily living component doesn’t automatically unlock benefits like Blue Badge or Motability. However, it can:

Benefit How Daily Living PIP Helps
Carer’s Allowance Someone caring for you may claim £81.90/week
Council Tax Reduction May qualify as severely mentally impaired exemption
Blue Badge Enhanced daily living + cognitive/mental health condition may qualify via discretionary route
Vehicle tax exemption Only with mobility component

PIP Rate History

Tax Year Daily Living Standard Daily Living Enhanced
2026/27 £72.65 £108.55
2025/26 £72.65 £108.55
2024/25 £68.10 £101.75
2023/24 £61.85 £92.40
2022/23 £61.85 £92.40

Tips for Your PIP Claim

Document Everything

What to Include Why It Helps
Medical evidence Letters from GP, consultants, therapists
Medication list Shows severity and ongoing treatment
Typical day description How activities are really affected
Bad day examples Assessors often focus on best days — counter this
Third-party statements Family, friends, carers who see your struggles

At the Assessment

Do Don’t
Describe your worst days Minimise symptoms
Explain how long tasks take Rush to prove capability
Mention if you need rest after Say “I manage” without context
Bring someone for support Go alone if anxious

If You’re Refused or Scored Too Low

  1. Mandatory reconsideration — Request within one month of decision
  2. Tribunal appeal — If reconsideration unsuccessful, appeal to independent tribunal
  3. Success rates — Around 70% of PIP appeals to tribunal succeed

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Personal Independence Payment (PIP)
  2. GOV.UK — PIP assessment criteria