Benefits & Support

PIP Evidence Requirements — What You Need to Support Your Claim

Complete guide to PIP evidence requirements in 2026. Covers what medical evidence to gather, how to request it, what DWP looks for, and how to build the strongest possible case.

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.

Strong evidence is the difference between a successful PIP claim and a disappointing refusal. Here’s exactly what to gather and how to present it.

Types of Evidence

Type What It Is How Important
Medical evidence GP/specialist letters, reports, test results Essential
Your PIP2 form Your own description of difficulties Essential
Supporting statements Letters from carers, family, support workers Very helpful
Appointment records Hospital appointments, therapy sessions Helpful
Aids and adaptations List of equipment you use Helpful
Photographs/videos Visual evidence of difficulties (optional) Sometimes helpful

Medical Evidence

From Your GP

Ask your GP for a letter that covers:

  • All relevant diagnoses
  • How long you’ve had each condition
  • Current medications and side effects
  • How conditions affect your daily activities (reference specific PIP activities if possible)
  • Treatment you’ve received and prognosis
  • Any referrals made

Template request to give your GP:

I am applying for PIP and would appreciate a supporting letter covering: my diagnoses, how my conditions affect my ability to prepare food, wash and bathe, dress, manage medication, and move around. Please also mention any aids I use and the impact of medication side effects. I’m happy to pay for this letter.

Cost: GPs may charge £20-50 for a PIP letter. This is not an NHS service, so charges are normal.

From Specialists and Consultants

Specialist What to Request
Rheumatologist Disease activity, functional limitations, treatment
Psychiatrist Diagnosis, symptom severity, functional impact
Neurologist Condition progression, cognitive and physical impact
Pain consultant Pain levels, treatment plan, functional limitations
Orthopaedic surgeon Joint function, post-operative limitations, walking ability
CPN/mental health nurse Day-to-day mental health impact, support needed
Occupational therapist Functional assessment, aids provided, home adaptations
Physiotherapist Mobility assessment, range of motion, exercise needs

What Makes Medical Evidence Effective

Weak evidence:

“Patient has fibromyalgia. Attends clinic regularly.”

Strong evidence:

“Patient has severe fibromyalgia affecting all four limbs. She reports being unable to prepare food on most days due to fatigue and hand pain, requiring assistance from her partner. She can walk approximately 30 metres before needing to rest due to widespread pain and exhaustion. Her condition is unlikely to improve significantly. I consider her unable to perform most daily activities independently and reliably.”

The difference: strong evidence links the condition to specific functional limitations relevant to PIP descriptors.

Your PIP2 Form (How Your Disability Affects You)

The PIP2 is the most important document in your claim. For each activity:

What to Include

Element Why It Matters
What you can’t do Directly shows limitation
What you need help with Shows dependency
How often Shows consistency (most days = stronger)
What happens on bad days Shows variability
Time taken Slower than normal = not reliable
Consequences of unaided attempts Burns, falls, errors = safety risk
Aids used Scores at least 2 points per activity

Writing Tips

  • Use the first person: “I cannot…” not “People with my condition…”
  • Be specific: “I can walk about 30 metres to my front gate before the pain forces me to stop” not “I find walking difficult”
  • Describe worst days: “On approximately 4 days out of 7, I cannot get out of bed before 11am due to fatigue and stiffness”
  • Include consequences: “Last month I fell in the shower because my legs gave way. My partner found me on the bathroom floor.”
  • Mention aids: “I use a shower seat, grab rails, a perching stool in the kitchen, and a walking stick outdoors”

Supporting Statements

Who Can Write One

  • Partner/spouse
  • Parent, sibling, adult child
  • Friend who visits regularly
  • Carer (paid or unpaid)
  • Support worker
  • Social worker
  • Neighbour who helps you

What to Include

The person should describe:

  1. Their relationship to you and how often they see you
  2. Specific help they provide (cooking, washing, dressing, shopping, mobility)
  3. How often they provide this help
  4. What happens when they can’t provide the help
  5. Changes they’ve noticed over time
  6. How your condition varies day to day

Template Structure

I am [name], [relationship] to [your name]. I see them [frequency].

On a typical day, I help with: [list specific activities].

For example, [specific examples of help provided: “I help them get dressed every morning because they cannot bend to put on shoes or socks. I also prepare all meals because they cannot stand at the cooker for more than 2 minutes.”]

On bad days (approximately [X] days per week), [description of worst-case help needed].

Without my help, I believe [your name] would [consequence: “be unable to eat properly, maintain hygiene, or leave the house”].

Other Evidence

Appointment Records

NHS appointment letters, hospital admission records, and clinic attendance logs show the severity and ongoing nature of your conditions.

Medication List

A current prescription list (available from your pharmacy or GP) objectively shows the number and type of conditions being treated.

Care and Support Records

If you have a local authority care assessment, social services care plan, or direct payment for care, include copies.

Equipment and Aids

List everything you use: walking sticks, wheelchairs, shower seats, grab rails, adapted cutlery, stocking aids, jar openers, mobility scooters.

Evidence Timeline

Stage Evidence Action
Before claiming Start gathering evidence — GP letter, specialist reports
Completing PIP2 Use evidence to support your answers, reference attached documents
Before assessment Bring copies of all evidence to the assessment
Mandatory Reconsideration Submit new or additional evidence addressing the specific points scored wrongly
Tribunal appeal Submit comprehensive evidence bundle including new reports if possible

Common Mistakes

Mistake What to Do Instead
Only submitting the PIP2, no medical evidence Always include at least a GP letter
Vague medical letters Ask for specific functional impact details
Describing good days Focus on typical/bad days
Not mentioning mental health Include all conditions, not just physical
Waiting for DWP to request evidence Submit your own — faster and more detailed
Not keeping copies Keep copies of everything you submit

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Personal Independence Payment (PIP)