Universal Credit UK: Eligibility, Rates, Housing, Childcare and Work Rules

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.

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.

Universal Credit has strict rules about savings and capital. This guide explains exactly how your savings affect your claim.

Read more: See our Universal Credit guide for a complete overview of this topic.

UC Capital Limits at a Glance

Savings LevelEffect on UC
Under £6,000No effect — full UC entitlement
£6,000 — £16,000UC reduced (tariff income applies)
Over £16,000Cannot 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

RuleAmount
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 SavingsAmount Over £6,000Number of £250sMonthly Tariff IncomeAnnual Reduction
£6,000£00£0£0
£7,000£1,0004£17.40£209
£8,000£2,0008£34.80£418
£10,000£4,00016£69.60£835
£12,000£6,00024£104.40£1,253
£14,000£8,00032£139.20£1,670
£15,999£9,99940£174.00£2,088
£16,000N/AN/ANo UCNo UC

How Tariff Income Works in Practice

Monthly UC EntitlementSavingsTariff IncomeUC 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 TypeCounted?Notes
Bank current accountsYesBalance at assessment date
Savings accountsYesIncluding fixed-term
Cash ISAsYesDespite being tax-free
Stocks and shares ISAsYesCurrent value
Premium BondsYesFull value (not just winnings)
National Savings certificatesYesIncluding index-linked
Individual sharesYesCurrent market value
Investment funds/unit trustsYesCurrent value
CryptocurrencyYesMarket value at assessment
CashYesPhysical money held
Money owed to youSometimesIf you could get it back
Life insurance cash valueSometimesSurrender value if accessible
Trust fundsDependsIf you can access
Business assetsUsually noIf used for work

What Is NOT Counted as Capital

Asset TypeWhy It’s Ignored
Your main homePrimary residence exempt
Personal possessionsFurniture, clothes, car (reasonable value)
Pension pot (inaccessible)Can’t access until pension age
Personal injury compensationFor 12 months + may be longer
Life insurance policy (not surrendered)Only counts if cashed in
Funeral planPre-paid plans ignored
Business premisesIf used for self-employment
Business stockWorking capital

Property and UC

Your Main Home

SituationCounted?
Home you live inNo
Home you’re trying to sellNo (for 6 months)
Home your partner lives inNo
Home you’ve moved out of temporarilyUsually no

Second Properties

Property SituationCounted?
Buy-to-let propertyYes — equity value
Holiday homeYes — full market value
Inherited propertyYes (usually)
Property abroadYes — UK market equivalent
Land you ownYes — market value

Property Valuation

FactorDetail
Value usedCurrent market value
MinusAny outstanding mortgage
Minus10% selling costs (sometimes allowed)
TimingValue at each assessment period

Example: Second Property

ItemAmount
Market value of property£150,000
Outstanding mortgage£80,000
Net equity£70,000
Effect on UCCannot claim (over £16,000)

Joint Claims and Savings

For couples claiming UC together:

RuleDetail
Both partners’ capitalAdded together
£16,000 limitApplies to joint capital
£6,000 thresholdAlso applies jointly
One partner over limitNo UC for either

Joint Capital Examples

Partner 1 SavingsPartner 2 SavingsCombinedUC Effect
£5,000£3,000£8,000Tariff income applies
£8,000£6,000£14,000Significant reduction
£10,000£7,000£17,000No UC for either
£15,000£1,500£16,500No UC for either

Children’s Savings

SituationCounted?
Child’s bank account (their money)No
Money you hold for childNo (if clearly theirs)
Child Trust Fund/Junior ISANo
Money held in your name for childDepends — may be disputed
Savings earmarked for child’s educationUsually your capital

Capital from Specific Sources

Compensation Payments

TypeHow It’s Treated
Personal injury compensationIgnored for 12 months
May be ignored longerIf set aside for care needs
Criminal injuries compensationUsually ignored 12 months
Mortgage missellingIgnored 52 weeks

Inheritance

TimelineTreatment
When receivedBecomes your capital immediately
Property inheritedMarket value minus mortgage
Money in probateNot yours until distributed
Waiting for estate to settleNot counted until received

Redundancy Payments

ComponentTreatment
Statutory redundancyCapital from day received
Notice payIncome (affects UC)
Pay in lieu of noticeIncome
Ex gratia paymentCapital

Spending Your Savings

What’s Acceptable

SpendingDWP View
Living expensesAcceptable
Paying debtsAcceptable
Essential purchasesAcceptable
Home repairsAcceptable
Medical costsAcceptable
Legal feesAcceptable

What’s Not Acceptable (Deprivation of Capital)

ActionDWP View
Gifting large sums before claimingDeprivation
Transferring property to familyDeprivation
Putting assets in someone else’s nameDeprivation
Deliberately overpaying debtsMay be questioned
Buying luxury items suddenlyMay be questioned

Deprivation of Capital Rules

RuleDetail
Applies ifYou dispose of capital to get/increase UC
DWP canTreat you as still having the capital
CalledNotional capital
How longUntil you would have used it naturally

When Capital Changes

Reporting Requirements

ChangeMust Report?
Savings go over £6,000Yes
Savings go over £16,000Yes (claim stops)
Significant windfallYes
InheritanceYes
Selling propertyYes
Opening new accountNo (but balance matters)

When You Fall Below £16,000

SituationWhat Happens
Savings drop below £16,000Can claim UC again
New claim required?Depends how long above limit
How quickly?Same assessment period if possible

Strategies to Manage Capital

Legitimate Approaches

StrategyNotes
Pay off debtsReduces capital, improves finances
Essential purchasesNew boiler, roof repairs, etc.
Pension contributionsMoves money to inaccessible capital
Overpay mortgageReduces capital (may reduce property value counted)
ISA won’t helpStill counted for UC

What Won’t Work

StrategyWhy It Fails
Giving money awayDeprivation of capital
Joint account with familyStill your money
Hiding cashFraud
“Lending” to familyStill your capital

Assessment Process

StageWhat Happens
Initial claimDeclare all capital
Each assessment periodCapital rechecked (usually via declaration)
Change of circumstancesReport capital changes
Compliance interviewDWP may request bank statements
Suspected fraudFull investigation

If DWP Asks for Bank Statements

What They’re Looking ForImplication
Large unexplained depositsUndeclared income/capital
Regular payments inUnreported earnings
Pattern of savingsChecking declared capital
Large withdrawals before claimDeprivation of capital

Special Circumstances

Self-Employment

AssetTreatment
Business bank accountWorking capital — may be ignored
Stock and inventoryUsually ignored
Tools and equipmentIgnored if used for work
Business propertyUsually ignored
Business debtsMay reduce capital value

Students

CapitalTreatment
Student loanIncome, not capital
Bursaries/grantsDepends on purpose
Savings for tuitionStill your capital
Parental contributionsIncome when received

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Universal Credit