Use this guide to estimate your Universal Credit entitlement. We’ll walk through the calculation step by step with real examples.
Universal Credit Calculation Steps
| Step | What You Calculate |
|---|---|
| 1 | Start with your Standard Allowance |
| 2 | Add any Additional Elements |
| 3 | Determine your Work Allowance |
| 4 | Calculate the Taper Deduction |
| 5 | Apply the Benefit Cap (if applicable) |
Step 1: Standard Allowance Rates 2025/26
Your baseline payment depends on your age and whether you’re single or in a couple.
| Situation | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Single, under 25 | £311.68 |
| Single, 25 or over | £393.45 |
| Couple, both under 25 | £489.23 |
| Couple, one or both 25+ | £617.56 |
Step 2: Additional Elements
Add the elements that apply to your circumstances.
Child Element
| Child | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| First child (born before 6 April 2017) | £333.33 |
| First child (born on or after 6 April 2017) | £287.92 |
| Each subsequent child | £287.92 |
Two-child limit: Generally, you can only claim for children born before 6 April 2017 or your first two children born after. Exceptions apply for multiple births, adoption, and non-consensual conception.
Childcare Element
If you’re working and paying for registered childcare:
| Children | Maximum Monthly |
|---|---|
| One child | £1,014.63 (85% of up to £1,193.68 costs) |
| Two or more children | £1,739.37 (85% of up to £2,046.32 costs) |
Disability and Health Elements
| Element | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Limited Capability for Work (LCW) | £0 (but keeps work allowance) |
| Limited Capability for Work-Related Activity (LCWRA) | £416.19 |
| Disabled child addition (lower rate) | £156.11 |
| Disabled child addition (higher rate) | £487.58 |
Carer Element
| Element | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Carer element | £198.31 |
You qualify if you provide at least 35 hours/week care for someone receiving a qualifying disability benefit.
Housing Element
| Housing Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Private renter | Local Housing Allowance (based on area and bedrooms) |
| Social renter | Actual rent (up to limits) |
| Homeowner | Service charges only (no mortgage help) |
Step 3: Work Allowance
Your work allowance is the amount you can earn before UC starts reducing.
| Situation | Work Allowance (Monthly) |
|---|---|
| UC includes housing element | £404 |
| UC does not include housing element | £673 |
| No children AND no LCW/LCWRA | £0 (no work allowance) |
You only get a work allowance if:
- You have dependent children, OR
- You have limited capability for work (LCW or LCWRA)
Step 4: Taper Deduction
For every £1 you earn above your work allowance, UC reduces by 55p.
Taper Calculation Formula
Taper Deduction = (Net Earnings - Work Allowance) × 55%
Taper Examples
| Monthly Earnings | Work Allowance | Above Allowance | Taper Deduction |
|---|---|---|---|
| £500 | £404 | £96 | £52.80 |
| £1,000 | £404 | £596 | £327.80 |
| £1,500 | £404 | £1,096 | £602.80 |
| £2,000 | £404 | £1,596 | £877.80 |
| £1,000 | £0 | £1,000 | £550.00 |
Worked Examples
Example 1: Single Parent, Part-Time Work
Situation:
- Single person, aged 30
- One child (born 2020)
- Part-time work: £800/month
- Rent: £700/month (LHA covers £700)
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Standard allowance (single, 25+) | £393.45 |
| Child element (1 child) | £287.92 |
| Housing element | £700.00 |
| Total before taper | £1,381.37 |
| Work allowance | £404 |
| Earnings above allowance | £800 - £404 = £396 |
| Taper deduction (55%) | £217.80 |
| Final UC payment | £1,163.57 |
Total monthly income: £800 + £1,163.57 = £1,963.57
Example 2: Couple with Children, One Working
Situation:
- Couple, both 28
- Two children (born 2019 and 2021)
- One partner works: £1,400/month
- Rent: £1,000/month (LHA covers £850)
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Standard allowance (couple, 25+) | £617.56 |
| Child element (2 children) | £575.84 |
| Housing element | £850.00 |
| Total before taper | £2,043.40 |
| Work allowance | £404 |
| Earnings above allowance | £1,400 - £404 = £996 |
| Taper deduction (55%) | £547.80 |
| Final UC payment | £1,495.60 |
Total monthly income: £1,400 + £1,495.60 = £2,895.60
Example 3: Single Person, No Children, Working
Situation:
- Single person, aged 27
- No children
- Working: £1,200/month
- Rent: £600/month (LHA covers £550)
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Standard allowance (single, 25+) | £393.45 |
| Housing element | £550.00 |
| Total before taper | £943.45 |
| Work allowance | £0 (no children/LCW) |
| Earnings above allowance | £1,200 |
| Taper deduction (55%) | £660.00 |
| Final UC payment | £283.45 |
Total monthly income: £1,200 + £283.45 = £1,483.45
Example 4: Couple, Both Working with Disability
Situation:
- Couple, both 35
- One partner has LCWRA
- Partner 1 earns: £1,000/month
- Partner 2 earns: £500/month (limited hours due to health)
- Rent: £900/month (social housing)
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Standard allowance (couple, 25+) | £617.56 |
| LCWRA element | £416.19 |
| Housing element | £900.00 |
| Total before taper | £1,933.75 |
| Work allowance | £404 |
| Combined earnings | £1,500 |
| Earnings above allowance | £1,500 - £404 = £1,096 |
| Taper deduction (55%) | £602.80 |
| Final UC payment | £1,330.95 |
Total monthly income: £1,500 + £1,330.95 = £2,830.95
Quick Calculation Tables
Single Person, No Children, Renting
| Monthly Earnings | UC (with £600 housing element) |
|---|---|
| £0 | £993.45 |
| £500 | £718.45 |
| £1,000 | £443.45 |
| £1,200 | £333.45 |
| £1,500 | £168.45 |
| £1,806 | £0 (UC stops) |
Single Parent, One Child, Renting
| Monthly Earnings | UC (with £700 housing element) |
|---|---|
| £0 | £1,381.37 |
| £500 | £1,328.57 |
| £1,000 | £1,053.57 |
| £1,500 | £778.57 |
| £2,000 | £503.57 |
| £2,500 | £228.57 |
| £2,916 | £0 (UC stops) |
Couple, Two Children, Renting
| Combined Monthly Earnings | UC (with £850 housing element) |
|---|---|
| £0 | £2,043.40 |
| £500 | £1,990.60 |
| £1,000 | £1,715.60 |
| £1,500 | £1,440.60 |
| £2,000 | £1,165.60 |
| £2,500 | £890.60 |
| £3,000 | £615.60 |
| £3,500 | £340.60 |
| £4,120 | £0 (UC stops) |
The Benefit Cap
Total UC and other benefits are capped at:
| Situation | Monthly Cap |
|---|---|
| Single, no children | £1,229.42 (£1,413.92 in Greater London) |
| Couples / families | £2,110.25 (£2,426.92 in Greater London) |
Benefits That Count Towards the Cap
- Universal Credit
- Child Benefit
- Jobseeker’s Allowance
- Child Tax Credit
- Housing Benefit
- ESA (in some cases)
Exemptions from the Benefit Cap
You’re exempt if:
- You or your partner receives Working Tax Credit
- Household earnings are at least £722/month (equivalent to 16 hours at NLW)
- You or partner receives disability benefits (PIP, DLA, AA, ESA Support Group)
- You receive Carer’s Allowance
- You receive Guardian’s Allowance
Earnings That Count
Income That Reduces UC
| Type | Counted? |
|---|---|
| Employment income (net of tax/NI) | Yes |
| Self-employment profit | Yes |
| Maternity/paternity pay | Yes |
| Sick pay | Yes |
| Notice pay | Yes |
| Tips and bonuses | Yes |
Income That Doesn’t Reduce UC
| Type | Counted? |
|---|---|
| PIP | No |
| DLA | No |
| Child Benefit | No (but counts for cap) |
| Attendance Allowance | No |
| Carer’s Allowance | Yes — but get carer element |
| Child maintenance received | No |
| Pension | Yes — counts as unearned income |
Assessment Period Effects
UC is assessed monthly, but your assessment period may not align with your paydays:
| Issue | Impact |
|---|---|
| Two paydays in one period | Higher earnings = lower UC that month |
| No payday in a period | Zero earnings = higher UC that month |
| Monthly pay on different date | May shift between assessment periods |
Tip: If paid 4-weekly, you’ll occasionally have two paydays in one assessment period, temporarily reducing UC.
How to Maximise UC
| Strategy | Effect |
|---|---|
| Report childcare costs | Up to 85% reimbursed |
| Apply for LCWRA if health issues | Extra £416.19/month |
| Claim Carer’s Allowance if caring | Triggers carer element |
| Report housing costs accurately | May be higher than you think |
| Track transitional protection | If migrated from legacy benefits |