Benefits & Support
Universal Credit and Savings — How Savings Affect Your UC Claim
Complete guide to Universal Credit savings rules 2025/26. Capital limits explained, how savings reduce your UC payment, what counts as savings, and assets that are ignored.
Universal Credit has strict rules about savings and capital. This guide explains exactly how your savings affect your claim.
UC Capital Limits at a Glance
| Savings Level |
Effect on UC |
| Under £6,000 |
No effect — full UC entitlement |
| £6,000 — £16,000 |
UC reduced (tariff income applies) |
| Over £16,000 |
Cannot claim UC |
How Savings Reduce Your UC
If you have savings between £6,000 and £16,000, DWP applies “tariff income” — assumed income from your capital.
Tariff Income Calculation
| Rule |
Amount |
| For every £250 (or part) over £6,000 |
£4.35 assumed monthly income |
| This reduces your UC by |
£4.35 per £250 |
Tariff Income Examples
| Total Savings |
Amount Over £6,000 |
Number of £250s |
Monthly Tariff Income |
Annual Reduction |
| £6,000 |
£0 |
0 |
£0 |
£0 |
| £7,000 |
£1,000 |
4 |
£17.40 |
£209 |
| £8,000 |
£2,000 |
8 |
£34.80 |
£418 |
| £10,000 |
£4,000 |
16 |
£69.60 |
£835 |
| £12,000 |
£6,000 |
24 |
£104.40 |
£1,253 |
| £14,000 |
£8,000 |
32 |
£139.20 |
£1,670 |
| £15,999 |
£9,999 |
40 |
£174.00 |
£2,088 |
| £16,000 |
N/A |
N/A |
No UC |
No UC |
How Tariff Income Works in Practice
| Monthly UC Entitlement |
Savings |
Tariff Income |
UC Payment |
| £800 |
£5,000 |
£0 |
£800 |
| £800 |
£8,000 |
£34.80 |
£765.20 |
| £800 |
£12,000 |
£104.40 |
£695.60 |
| £800 |
£15,500 |
£165.30 |
£634.70 |
What Counts as Capital
| Asset Type |
Counted? |
Notes |
| Bank current accounts |
Yes |
Balance at assessment date |
| Savings accounts |
Yes |
Including fixed-term |
| Cash ISAs |
Yes |
Despite being tax-free |
| Stocks and shares ISAs |
Yes |
Current value |
| Premium Bonds |
Yes |
Full value (not just winnings) |
| National Savings certificates |
Yes |
Including index-linked |
| Individual shares |
Yes |
Current market value |
| Investment funds/unit trusts |
Yes |
Current value |
| Cryptocurrency |
Yes |
Market value at assessment |
| Cash |
Yes |
Physical money held |
| Money owed to you |
Sometimes |
If you could get it back |
| Life insurance cash value |
Sometimes |
Surrender value if accessible |
| Trust funds |
Depends |
If you can access |
| Business assets |
Usually no |
If used for work |
What Is NOT Counted as Capital
| Asset Type |
Why It’s Ignored |
| Your main home |
Primary residence exempt |
| Personal possessions |
Furniture, clothes, car (reasonable value) |
| Pension pot (inaccessible) |
Can’t access until pension age |
| Personal injury compensation |
For 12 months + may be longer |
| Life insurance policy (not surrendered) |
Only counts if cashed in |
| Funeral plan |
Pre-paid plans ignored |
| Business premises |
If used for self-employment |
| Business stock |
Working capital |
Property and UC
Your Main Home
| Situation |
Counted? |
| Home you live in |
No |
| Home you’re trying to sell |
No (for 6 months) |
| Home your partner lives in |
No |
| Home you’ve moved out of temporarily |
Usually no |
Second Properties
| Property Situation |
Counted? |
| Buy-to-let property |
Yes — equity value |
| Holiday home |
Yes — full market value |
| Inherited property |
Yes (usually) |
| Property abroad |
Yes — UK market equivalent |
| Land you own |
Yes — market value |
Property Valuation
| Factor |
Detail |
| Value used |
Current market value |
| Minus |
Any outstanding mortgage |
| Minus |
10% selling costs (sometimes allowed) |
| Timing |
Value at each assessment period |
Example: Second Property
| Item |
Amount |
| Market value of property |
£150,000 |
| Outstanding mortgage |
£80,000 |
| Net equity |
£70,000 |
| Effect on UC |
Cannot claim (over £16,000) |
Joint Claims and Savings
For couples claiming UC together:
| Rule |
Detail |
| Both partners’ capital |
Added together |
| £16,000 limit |
Applies to joint capital |
| £6,000 threshold |
Also applies jointly |
| One partner over limit |
No UC for either |
Joint Capital Examples
| Partner 1 Savings |
Partner 2 Savings |
Combined |
UC Effect |
| £5,000 |
£3,000 |
£8,000 |
Tariff income applies |
| £8,000 |
£6,000 |
£14,000 |
Significant reduction |
| £10,000 |
£7,000 |
£17,000 |
No UC for either |
| £15,000 |
£1,500 |
£16,500 |
No UC for either |
Children’s Savings
| Situation |
Counted? |
| Child’s bank account (their money) |
No |
| Money you hold for child |
No (if clearly theirs) |
| Child Trust Fund/Junior ISA |
No |
| Money held in your name for child |
Depends — may be disputed |
| Savings earmarked for child’s education |
Usually your capital |
Capital from Specific Sources
Compensation Payments
| Type |
How It’s Treated |
| Personal injury compensation |
Ignored for 12 months |
| May be ignored longer |
If set aside for care needs |
| Criminal injuries compensation |
Usually ignored 12 months |
| Mortgage misselling |
Ignored 52 weeks |
Inheritance
| Timeline |
Treatment |
| When received |
Becomes your capital immediately |
| Property inherited |
Market value minus mortgage |
| Money in probate |
Not yours until distributed |
| Waiting for estate to settle |
Not counted until received |
Redundancy Payments
| Component |
Treatment |
| Statutory redundancy |
Capital from day received |
| Notice pay |
Income (affects UC) |
| Pay in lieu of notice |
Income |
| Ex gratia payment |
Capital |
Spending Your Savings
What’s Acceptable
| Spending |
DWP View |
| Living expenses |
Acceptable |
| Paying debts |
Acceptable |
| Essential purchases |
Acceptable |
| Home repairs |
Acceptable |
| Medical costs |
Acceptable |
| Legal fees |
Acceptable |
What’s Not Acceptable (Deprivation of Capital)
| Action |
DWP View |
| Gifting large sums before claiming |
Deprivation |
| Transferring property to family |
Deprivation |
| Putting assets in someone else’s name |
Deprivation |
| Deliberately overpaying debts |
May be questioned |
| Buying luxury items suddenly |
May be questioned |
Deprivation of Capital Rules
| Rule |
Detail |
| Applies if |
You dispose of capital to get/increase UC |
| DWP can |
Treat you as still having the capital |
| Called |
Notional capital |
| How long |
Until you would have used it naturally |
When Capital Changes
Reporting Requirements
| Change |
Must Report? |
| Savings go over £6,000 |
Yes |
| Savings go over £16,000 |
Yes (claim stops) |
| Significant windfall |
Yes |
| Inheritance |
Yes |
| Selling property |
Yes |
| Opening new account |
No (but balance matters) |
When You Fall Below £16,000
| Situation |
What Happens |
| Savings drop below £16,000 |
Can claim UC again |
| New claim required? |
Depends how long above limit |
| How quickly? |
Same assessment period if possible |
Strategies to Manage Capital
Legitimate Approaches
| Strategy |
Notes |
| Pay off debts |
Reduces capital, improves finances |
| Essential purchases |
New boiler, roof repairs, etc. |
| Pension contributions |
Moves money to inaccessible capital |
| Overpay mortgage |
Reduces capital (may reduce property value counted) |
| ISA won’t help |
Still counted for UC |
What Won’t Work
| Strategy |
Why It Fails |
| Giving money away |
Deprivation of capital |
| Joint account with family |
Still your money |
| Hiding cash |
Fraud |
| “Lending” to family |
Still your capital |
Assessment Process
| Stage |
What Happens |
| Initial claim |
Declare all capital |
| Each assessment period |
Capital rechecked (usually via declaration) |
| Change of circumstances |
Report capital changes |
| Compliance interview |
DWP may request bank statements |
| Suspected fraud |
Full investigation |
If DWP Asks for Bank Statements
| What They’re Looking For |
Implication |
| Large unexplained deposits |
Undeclared income/capital |
| Regular payments in |
Unreported earnings |
| Pattern of savings |
Checking declared capital |
| Large withdrawals before claim |
Deprivation of capital |
Special Circumstances
Self-Employment
| Asset |
Treatment |
| Business bank account |
Working capital — may be ignored |
| Stock and inventory |
Usually ignored |
| Tools and equipment |
Ignored if used for work |
| Business property |
Usually ignored |
| Business debts |
May reduce capital value |
Students
| Capital |
Treatment |
| Student loan |
Income, not capital |
| Bursaries/grants |
Depends on purpose |
| Savings for tuition |
Still your capital |
| Parental contributions |
Income when received |
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