Official Statistics

Benefit sanctions statistics to July 2020 (experimental)

Updated 10 June 2021

Applies to England, Scotland and Wales

The latest release of these statistics can be found in the benefit sanctions statistics collection.

This release of statistics on Benefit Sanctions includes data up to July 2020.

Statistics covered in this bulletin include data for sanction decisions during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Although legislative changes to disapply work-search and work availability requirements were effective between 30 March 2020 and 30 June 2020 (in response to the pandemic), some sanction decisions for these types of failures could have been made during this time period because decisions are often made and processed after the date that the claimant failure occurred. This means that it was possible for sanction decisions to be recorded after legislation changes came into effect, in instances where a claimant prior to 30 March 2020 has failed to meet the work requirements set out in their claimant commitment. Additionally, sanction decisions were also possible for some failures which occurred after this date, for example, for leaving a job voluntarily without good reason or for misconduct.

Conditionality has been generally reintroduced from the 30 June, and new and revised claimant commitments for UC claimants are being reintroduced from 1 July 2020 on a phased approach and as capacity allows (3rd August for Legacy JSA new claims). Claimants can only receive sanctions for failure to meet commitments once they have a new or updated tailored claimant commitment in place.

This impacts data for Universal Credit (UC) and Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) sanctions. The next release will be in February 2021.

We are seeking user feedback on this HTML version of the statistical bulletin which replaces the PDF version. Send comments to: stats-consultation@dwp.gov.uk.

There should be no comparisons made across benefits.

The data sources used to produce these statistics are very different and while we have attempted to use consistent methodology, there are differences in methodological approaches between benefits. Additionally, the benefits themselves are very different and require interpretation based on the rules of the specific benefit.

1. Main stories

On JSA, if a claimant fails to attend a Work-Focused Interview, their claim can be closed. However, because UC replaces a number of benefits, claims are not closed if a claimant fails to attend a Work-Focused Interview. In the period from August 2019 to July 2020, 91% of UC full service adverse decisions occurred due to failure to attend or participate in a Work-Focused Interview.

The statistics show:

  • prior to legislation changes made on 30 March 2020, 2.12% of UC full service claimants subject to conditionality at the point where the sanction was applied had a deduction taken from their UC full service award as a result of a sanction. In August 2020, this proportion was 0.35%. This is:
    • down 0.37 percentage points from May 2020
    • down 2.01 percentage points in the latest 12 months
  • over the course of the roll-out of UC (live and full service), the balance of individuals in conditionality groups subject to sanction as a proportion of the caseload has changed.
  • in August 2020, 65% of UC claimants were in the conditionality groups that could be subject to sanction. This proportion:
    • has trended downwards from February 2019 until March 2020. At this time there was a change in trend, with an increase in the proportion. This coincided with an increase to the UC caseload during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
    • has decreased from 81% in August 2015

For further information regarding how this is calculated, see the ‘’Sanction Rates’’ section of the background information and methodology document

The data shows:

  • numbers of claimants on JSA and Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) Work Related Activity Group (WRAG) have steadily reduced due to migration to UC (live and full service), and therefore the number of sanctions is now very low for JSA and ESA (WRAG)
  • the percentage of JSA claimants with a drop in payment due to a sanction in March 2020 was 0.03%. This is:
    • unchanged from December 2019
    • down 0.05 percentage points in the latest 12 months
  • the percentage of ESA (WRAG) claimants with a drop in payment due to a sanction in March 2020 was 0.02%. This is:
    • down 0.02 percentage points from December 2019
    • down 0.07 percentage points in the latest 12 months

2. What you need to know

If you do not meet one or more conditions of your benefit claim without good reason, your benefit could be stopped or reduced. This is a benefit sanction. However, not everyone that is initially referred for failing to meet the conditions of their claim will receive a sanction. Where a claimant’s benefit is reduced, the claimant may be eligible for a hardship payment.

Further information about the sanctions process, source of these statistics and the publication rounding policy can be found in the background information and methodology documents.

Statistics covered in this bulletin include data for sanction decisions during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Although legislative changes to disapply work-search and work availability requirements were effective between 30 March 2020 and 30 June 2020 (in response to the pandemic), some sanction decisions for these types of failures could have been made during this time period because decisions are often made and processed after the date that the claimant failure occurred. This means that it was possible for sanction decisions to be recorded after legislation changes came into effect, in instances where a claimant prior to 30 March 2020 has failed to meet the work requirements set out in their claimant commitment. Additionally, sanction decisions were also possible for some failures which occurred after this date, for example, for leaving a job voluntarily without good reason or for misconduct.

Conditionality has been generally reintroduced from the 30 June, and new and revised claimant commitments for UC claimants are being reintroduced from 1 July 2020 on a phased approach and as capacity allows (3rd August for Legacy JSA new claims). Claimants can only receive sanctions for failure to meet commitments once they have a new or updated tailored claimant commitment in place.

This impacts data for Universal Credit (UC) and Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) sanctions.

Users can also:

The data in this publication is the latest available for each of the following sets of statistics.

UC sanction statistics

The UC live service statistics in this release date from August 2015, whilst the UC full service statistics in this release date from May 2016 except for the statistics for UC full service rate statistics in this release which date from April 2019.

JSA sanction statistics

The JSA statistics in this release date from the regime change on 22 October 2012 when new rules were brought in.

Data from before the regime change (April 2000 to 21 October 2012) is available on Stat-Xplore and in the supporting tables.

Further information on the regime change can be found in the background information and methodology document.

ESA sanction statistics

The ESA statistics in this release date from the regime change on 3 December 2012 when new rules were brought in.

Data from before the regime change (October 2008 to 2 December 2012) is available on Stat-Xplore and in the supporting tables.

Further information on the regime change can be found in the background information and methodology document.

Income Support (IS) sanction statistics

These are not included in this publication, but are available on Stat-Xplore.

Migration of Claimants to UC Full Service

The move of legacy claimants onto full service will continue until migration is completed. As of April 2019, 100% of UC live service claimants have transferred onto full service and we are now including statistics relating to UC full service decisions in this publication.

Definitions

Sanction decisions

A claimant is referred to a sanction Decision Maker when they do not meet a condition of their benefit. The Decision Maker looks at the available information about the claimant and their referral and decides on an outcome. The decision made can be:

  • Adverse – they decide to sanction the claimant
  • Non-Adverse – they decide not to sanction the claimant
  • Cancelled – they decide that the referral was not appropriate and cancel it
  • Reserved – a decision to sanction the claimant cannot be made, since the claimant is not currently on benefit, so the sanction cannot be applied. The claimant will be re-referred to a Decision Maker if they begin to claim benefit again

Within this publication, we refer to all of these outcomes as decisions. Many sanction decisions can be made during the course of a claim where the claimant has failed to meet the conditions of their benefit claim more than once.

Sanction stages

Each JSA, ESA (WRAG) or IS sanction decision can have a maximum of four stages, beginning with the Original Decision made by a Decision Maker. If the claimant does not agree that their benefit should be reduced, they may request a Decision Review, Mandatory Reconsideration, and Appeal. UC has a maximum of three stages as there is no Decision Review.

In the statistics, only the latest decision is kept, meaning that any previous decisions for each sanction referral are updated with every publication.

Sanction durations

We count the length of time that a claimant is receiving less benefit because they were being sanctioned and calculate the median. The median is the middle number when all of the sanction lengths have been arranged from smallest to largest. Durations are counted up to and including the last month in which a deduction is taken. If someone has multiple sanctions which are served without a break in deductions, this will be counted as one sanction in the statistics. The underlying figures can be found in the supporting tables.

Sanction rates

We calculate the number of people who are receiving less benefit because they were sanctioned as a proportion of the total number of people in receipt of each benefit at a point in time (i.e. on a specific day of the month). These figures are calculated differently to the decisions figures, which are based on the number of decisions made in a full month. The underlying figures can be found in the supporting tables.

Destinations

We track what happens to claimants after they receive an original, adverse sanction decision. The figures show the amount of time spent on different working age benefits (UC, JSA, ESA (WRAG) and IS) in the 180-day period following the decision. In addition, we have developed statistics to show who has had a period of earnings after their sanction. Further information can be found in the destinations methodology document.

UC full service

At present, we only hold data on original, adverse sanction decisions for claimants on UC full service and cannot differentiate between non-adverse, reserved and cancelled outcomes. Prior to May 2016, UC full service was being implemented as a trial in a small area of the UK only (Sutton, Southwark, Croydon, Hounslow and Musselburgh) so data on original, adverse decisions is included from May 2016 onwards.

UC live service

New claims to UC live service ceased in January 2018, and since then the remaining live service cases have been gradually migrated to UC full service. This has resulted in a gradual decrease in the number of live service sanction decisions. By 1 April 2019, the systems that were used to administer live service cases were shut down. Due to this, data for any original UC live service sanction decisions has been frozen from this point.

3. Universal Credit Full Service

There should be no comparisons made across benefits.

The data sources used to produce these statistics are very different and while we have attempted to use consistent methodology, there are differences in methodological approaches between benefits. Additionally, the benefits themselves are very different and require interpretation based on the rules of the specific benefit.

Statistics covered in this bulletin include data for sanction decisions during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Although legislative changes to disapply work-search and work availability requirements were effective between 30 March 2020 and 30 June 2020 (in response to the pandemic), some sanction decisions for these types of failures could have been made during this time period because decisions are often made and processed after the date that the claimant failure occurred. This means that it was possible for sanction decisions to be recorded after legislation changes came into effect, in instances where a claimant prior to 30 March 2020 has failed to meet the work requirements set out in their claimant commitment. Additionally, sanction decisions were also possible for some failures which occurred after this date, for example, for leaving a job voluntarily without good reason or for misconduct.

Conditionality has been generally reintroduced from the 30 June, and new and revised claimant commitments for UC claimants are being reintroduced from 1 July 2020 on a phased approach and as capacity allows (3rd August for Legacy JSA new claims). Claimants can only receive sanctions for failure to meet commitments once they have a new or updated tailored claimant commitment in place.

This impacts data for Universal Credit (UC) and Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) sanctions.

These figures are for full service claimants only and do not include live service data; full service data and live service data come from different sources, which is why they have been reported separately for decisions. Note that rates are calculated in a manner that is not affected. For further information, see the UC background information and methodology document.

The migration to UC full service will continue until legacy benefits have ceased. As of April 2019, 100% of UC live service claimants have transferred onto full service and we are now including statistics relating to UC full service decisions in this publication.

Data for numbers of original adverse decisions has been included from May 2016, for UC full service. This is because prior to this time, UC full service was being implemented as a trial in a small area of the UK only (Sutton, Southwark, Croydon, Hounslow and Musselburgh). More information about this is available in our UC background information and methodology document.

It should be noted that references to full service adverse decisions describe original, adverse decisions only. We are currently unable to provide statistics on original non-adverse, reserved or cancelled decisions, as this information is not captured on the front end system. We are looking at ways of improving the way we collect sanctions information in UC full service.

3.1 UC full service: Sanction decisions and reasons – Experimental Statistics

The numbers of adverse sanction decisions reached a peak in October 2019 after following an upward trend as UC full service was rolled out and the UC caseload built up. In March 2020 the number of adverse sanction decisions decreased to 11,000. The number of adverse sanction decisions continued to drop following the legislative changes to work requirements on 30 March (in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic).

The changed legislation period came to an end on 30 June 2020, and there were 10 adverse decisions made in July 2020.

Summary of original UC full service adverse decision reasons from August 2019 to July 2020

Original adverse decisions made by reason group Latest Year (Thousands) Latest Year (%) Latest Quarter (Thousands)
Work-Focused Interviews 129.7 90.9 0
Availability for Work 8.0 5.6 0
Employment Programmes 2.9 2.0 0
Reasons for Leaving Previous Employment 1.7 1.2 0
Other 0.3 0.3 0
Total 142.6 100 0

Notes:

  1. Note that these are original, adverse decisions, not all decisions as with other benefits.
  2. Disclosure control has been applied to this data for confidentiality purposes. Due to this, totals may not be the sum of the individual data breakdown
  3. For a full breakdown of the adverse decision reasons, see the methodology document
  4. Proportions have been removed for the latest quarter, where the overall number of sanction decisions is low. This has been done because the disclosure control applied to the data could cause a misleading representation when calculating percentages.

Failure to attend or participate in a Work-Focused Interview accounted for 91% of all adverse decisions in the last year. Availability for Work was the next most common sanction reason, accounting for 6% of adverse decisions in the last year.

4. Universal Credit Live Service

There should be no comparisons made across benefits.

The data sources used to produce these statistics are very different and while we have attempted to use consistent methodology, there are differences in methodological approaches between benefits. Additionally, the benefits themselves are very different and require interpretation based on the rules of the specific benefit.

New claims to UC live service ceased in January 2018, and since then the remaining live service cases have been gradually migrated to UC full service. This has resulted in a gradual decrease in the number of live service sanction decisions. At the end of March 2019, the systems that were used to administer live service cases were shut down and no further original sanction decisions were made on this service. The UC live service decisions measures found in this section have continued to be updated to capture any outstanding decisions information for mandatory reconsiderations and appeals.

As the numbers for UC live service mandatory reconsiderations and appeals have continued to decrease, they have been impacted by the disclosure controls that are applied to this data for confidentiality purposes. As a result, we have taken the decision to freeze all statistics for UC live service from the current release. If you have any concerns or feedback on this decision please contact the Employment Programmes and Sanction Statistics team at epass.team@dwp.gov.uk.

4.1 UC live service: Sanction decisions and reasons – Experimental Statistics

The total number of monthly decisions has varied since August 2015, with peaks in December 2016 (50,000) and October 2017 (46,000) and falling to 0 in July 2020.

The volume of decisions processed has fallen based on the fact that UC live service has closed to new claims, and that the entire caseload has migrated to UC full service.

53% of original decisions have resulted in a sanction being applied and 69% of mandatory reconsiderations resulted in a sanction being upheld since August 2015.

Summary of UC live service decision reasons from August 2019 to July 2020

All decisions made by reason group Latest Year Latest Year (%) Latest Quarter
Work-Focused Interviews 30 53.3 0
Availability for Work 10 18.3 0
Employment Programmes 10 20 0
Reason for Leaving Previous Employment 0 0 0
Other 0 0 0
Total 60 100 0

Notes:

  1. Disclosure control has been applied to this data for confidentiality purposes. Due to this, totals may not be the sum of the individual data breakdowns.
  2. 100% of UC live service claimants were transferred onto UC full service by April 2019. There are no original decisions on UC live service past this point, hence any changes beyond this point refer to mandatory reconsiderations and appeals only.
  3. Proportions have been removed for the latest quarter, where the overall number of sanction decisions is low. This has been done because the disclosure control applied to the data could cause a misleading representation when calculating percentages.
  4. For a full breakdown of the adverse decision reasons see the methodology document.

Failure to attend or participate in a Work-Focused Interview accounted for 53% of all UC live service sanction decisions from August 2019 to July 2020.

4.2 UC live service: Destinations of claimants receiving a benefit sanction - Experimental Statistics

After receiving a UC live service sanction decision, claimants spent an average (mean) of 153 days out of the following 180 days in receipt of benefit (UC, JSA, ESA (WRAG) or IS). On average (mean), only 2 of the 180 days were spent on a benefit that was not UC.

In the 180 days following a UC live service sanction decision, 4.9% of claimants were not in receipt of any of the tracked benefits (UC, JSA, ESA (WRAG) or IS). 76.2% of claimants spent over 150 days (5 months) in receipt of benefit and 70.3% of claimants spent the full 180 days in receipt of benefit.

After receiving a benefit sanction decision, UC live service claimants spent an average (mean) of 51 days out of the following 180 days earning, with 9.0% of claimants earning for the full 180 days after they had been sanctioned. See the methodology document for further information on how earnings are calculated.

5. Universal Credit Live and Full Service

There should be no comparisons made across benefits.

The data sources used to produce these statistics are very different and while we have attempted to use consistent methodology, there are differences in methodological approaches between benefits. Additionally, the benefits themselves are very different and require interpretation based on the rules of the specific benefit.

Statistics covered in this bulletin include data for sanction decisions during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Although legislative changes to disapply work-search and work availability requirements were effective between 30 March 2020 and 30 June 2020 (in response to the pandemic), some sanction decisions for these types of failures could have been made during this time period because decisions are often made and processed after the date that the claimant failure occurred. This means that it was possible for sanction decisions to be recorded after legislation changes came into effect, in instances where a claimant prior to 30 March 2020 has failed to meet the work requirements set out in their claimant commitment. Additionally, sanction decisions were also possible for some failures which occurred after this date, for example, for leaving a job voluntarily without good reason or for misconduct.

Conditionality has been generally reintroduced from the 30 June, and new and revised claimant commitments for UC claimants are being reintroduced from 1 July 2020 on a phased approach and as capacity allows (3rd August for Legacy JSA new claims). Claimants can only receive sanctions for failure to meet commitments once they have a new or updated tailored claimant commitment in place.

This impacts data for Universal Credit (UC) and Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) sanctions.

While carrying out a detailed investigation of the sanctions data to improve the methodology, it has been identified that the complex code used to process the data for UC sanction durations statistics was not performing as expected. This was complicated further by the combination and substantially different methods of processing data from the separate UC full service and UC live service systems. The measures affected are the sanction duration and median sanction length. While we consult with data engineers and architects to understand the complex data, and conduct further in depth investigations into the code, both of these series are being suspended for UC live service and UC full service from this release.

We are carrying out further investigative work on sanction durations, and aim to revise the complete series for sanction duration and median sanction length statistics on the basis of the improved methodology on the 15 December 2020. Previous publications will not be revised, as the full time series will be included within the December release.

Initial investigation into the UC full service rate code and methodology – with the intent of including open sanctions in the rate – has highlighted that the methodology currently used to calculate the UC rate differs from that described in previous published statistics, with open sanctions already being included in the measure for UC full service. As the rate already includes open sanctions, no further work is required to improve this aspect of the methodology. As we are currently still investigating if this is also the case for UC live service we are removing UC live service from the rate and will publish UC full service only from April 2019. We will reinstate the UC live service rate as soon as possible, following the finalisation of investigations and successful completion of quality assurance processes.

Figures for UC full service adverse decisions, UC live service decisions and destinations and all legacy benefit measures are unaffected.

5.1 UC live and full service: Benefit sanction rates – Experimental Statistics

The sanction rate is calculated as the proportion of people on each benefit at a point in time (meaning on the same day that the claimant count is recorded) with a deduction from their benefit due to a sanction. This is different to the data on sanction decisions, which uses the total number of decisions across a whole month. Investigations into the UC full service rate code and methodology has highlighted that the methodology currently used to calculate the UC rate differs from that described in previous published statistics, with open sanctions already being included in the measure for UC full service. UC live service data has been temporarily suspended from this section, and statistics have been provided from April 2019 for full service only. For further information, see details at the start of section 5.

Prior to legislation changes made on 30 March 2020, 2.12% of UC full service claimants subject to conditionality at the point where the sanction was applied had a deduction taken from their UC full service award as a result of a sanction. In August 2020, this proportion was 0.35%.

The experimental monthly rate of UC full service claimants with a sanction deduction has remained largely stable from April 2019 until March 2020. At this time there was a sharp downwards trend, which coincided with an increase to the UC caseload during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Over the course of the roll-out of UC, the balance of individuals subject to sanction as a proportion of the caseload has changed. In August 2020, 65% of the UC caseload were in the conditionality groups that could be subject to sanction, compared to 81% in August 2015.

5.2 UC live and full service: Benefit sanction durations – Experimental Statistics

While carrying out a detailed investigation of the sanctions data to improve the methodology, it has been identified that the complex code used to process the data for UC sanction durations statistics was not performing as expected. This was complicated further by the combination and substantially different methods of processing data from the separate UC full service and UC live service systems. The measures affected are the sanction duration and median sanction length. While we consult with data engineers and architects to understand the complex data, and conduct further in depth investigations into the code, both of these series are being suspended for UC live service and UC full service from this release.

We are carrying out further investigative work on sanction durations, and aim to revise the complete series for sanction duration and median sanction length statistics on the basis of the improved methodology on the 15 December 2020. Previous publications will not be revised, as the full time series will be included within the December release.

6. Jobseeker’s Allowance

There should be no comparisons made across benefits.

The data sources used to produce these statistics are very different and while we have attempted to use consistent methodology, there are differences in methodological approaches between benefits. Additionally, the benefits themselves are very different and require interpretation based on the rules of the specific benefit.

6.1 JSA: Benefit sanction rates – Experimental Statistics

The sanction rate is calculated as the proportion of people on each benefit at a point in time (meaning on the same day that the claimant count is recorded) with a deduction from their benefit due to a sanction. This is different to the data on sanction decisions, which uses the total number of decisions across a whole month.

In March 2020, 0.03% of people on JSA had a deduction taken from their payment as a result of a sanction.

The experimental monthly rate of JSA claimants with a sanction deduction has decreased steadily over the past six years from a peak of 1.78% in October 2013, in line with the decrease in JSA sanction decisions.

6.2 JSA: Sanction decisions and reasons – Official Statistics

Statistics covered in this bulletin include data for sanction decisions during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Although legislative changes to disapply work-search and work availability requirements were effective between 30 March 2020 and 30 June 2020 (in response to the pandemic), some sanction decisions for these types of failures could have been made during this time period because decisions are often made and processed after the date that the claimant failure occurred. This means that it was possible for sanction decisions to be recorded after legislation changes came into effect, in instances where a claimant prior to 30 March 2020 has failed to meet the work requirements set out in their claimant commitment. Additionally, sanction decisions were also possible for some failures which occurred after this date, for example, for leaving a job voluntarily without good reason or for misconduct.

Conditionality has been generally reintroduced from the 30 June, and new and revised claimant commitments for UC claimants are being reintroduced from 1 July 2020 on a phased approach and as capacity allows (3rd August for Legacy JSA new claims). Claimants can only receive sanctions for failure to meet commitments once they have a new or updated tailored claimant commitment in place.

This impacts data for Universal Credit (UC) and Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) sanctions.

The fall in decisions is in part due to the fall in JSA claimants as more people move to UC. There was an increase in JSA sanction decisions made in the earlier months of 2020, resulting from processing a backlog of sanction decisions relating to referrals made under the reason of “failure to attend a place on a training scheme or employment programme without good reason”. Over the last 6 years, the total number of decisions per month has declined. Following the legislative changes in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic the number of sanction decisions dropped further. JSA sanction decisions have remained low, with 0 in July 2020.

Original decisions currently account for 86% of all decisions made since October 2012. Since October 2012, 47% of original decisions have resulted in a sanction being applied. Since the introduction of the Mandatory Reconsideration in November 2013, Appeals have dropped from a peak of 4,600 in October 2013 to only 10 in the last year.

Summary of decision reasons, August 2019 to July 2020

All decisions made by reason group Latest Year Latest Year (%) Latest Quarter
Work Programme 20 0.6 0
Work-Focused Interview 540 21.8 0
Availability for Work 1,020 41.4 0
Reason for Leaving Previous Employment 10 0.3 0
Other Employment Programmes 880 35.9 0
Other 0 0 0
Total 2,460 100 10

Notes:

  1. Disclosure control has been applied to this data for confidentiality purposes. Due to this, totals may not be the sum of the individual data breakdowns.
  2. For a full breakdown of the adverse decision reasons, see the methodology document.
  3. Proportions have been removed for the latest quarter, where the overall number of sanction decisions is low. This has been done because the disclosure control applied to the data could cause a misleading representation when calculating percentages.

The trend in JSA sanction decisions also coincides with the end of the Work Programme. Less than 1% of all JSA sanction decisions in the last year were due to Work Programme sanction referrals. These have been falling since October 2013, making the total number of JSA sanction decisions fall. Referrals to the Work Programme ended in March 2017.

41% of sanction decisions in the last year were due to Availability for Work referrals, followed by 36% of referrals for failing to attend a place on a training scheme or employment programme.

6.3 JSA: Benefit sanction durations – Experimental Statistics

The figures for benefit sanction durations are calculated based on sanctions that have ended, using the number of weeks that a claimant has a drop in their benefit payments to determine the length of the sanction. This means that if someone has multiple sanctions which are served without a break in deductions, this will be counted as one sanction in the statistics.

95% of ended JSA sanctions lasted 13 weeks or less since October 2012. The average (median) JSA sanction lasted 28 days. See the methodology document for further information on why a median has been used.

Since October 2012, 63% of all sanctions that ended lasted 4 weeks or less, a further 32% lasted between 5 and 13 weeks. 5% lasted over 13 weeks. In the period from August 2019 to July 2020, 41% of all decisions were made on the referral reason group Availability for Work. A further 22% of all decisions in the same time period were made on the referral reason group Work-Focused Interviews. For a first-time failure, sanctions issued under this referral reason last 4 weeks. This helps to explain why such a large proportion of sanctions last 4 weeks and under.

6.4 JSA: Destinations of claimants receiving a benefit sanction – Experimental Statistics

After receiving a JSA sanction decision, claimants spent an average (mean) of 111 days out of the following 180 days in receipt of benefit (JSA, UC, ESA (WRAG) or IS). On average (mean), 14 of the 180 days were spent on a benefit that was not JSA.

In the 180 days following a JSA sanction decision, 5.9% of claimants were not in receipt of any of the tracked benefits (JSA, UC, ESA (WRAG) or IS). 42.1% of claimants spent over 150 days (5 months) in receipt of benefit and 26.9% of claimants spent the full 180 days in receipt of benefit.

After receiving a benefit sanction decision, JSA claimants spent an average (mean) of 28 days out of the following 180 days earning, with 2.5% of JSA claimants earning for the full 180 days after they had been sanctioned. See the methodology document for further information on how earnings are calculated.

There should be no comparisons made across benefits.

The data sources used to produce these statistics are very different and while we have attempted to use consistent methodology, there are differences in methodological approaches between benefits. Additionally, the benefits themselves are very different and require interpretation based on the rules of the specific benefit.

As part of a claim to ESA, a Work Capability Assessment (WCA) is carried out. If the claimant’s capability for work is limited by their health condition or disability, and they are eligible to remain on ESA, the claimant is placed in one of two groups:

  • the Work Related Activity Group (WRAG)
  • the Support Group

Those in the Support Group do not have to attend interviews and are not subject to sanctions.

Those in the WRAG group may be expected to attend regular interviews with their work coach. They may also be expected to undertake Work Related Activity (WRA) to give them the best prospects of moving into work when they are able. Any WRA should be reasonable and appropriate for the claimant, based on their health condition or disability.

7.1 ESA (WRAG): Benefit sanction rates – Experimental Statistics

The sanction rate is calculated as the proportion of people on each benefit at a point in time (this means on the same day that the claimant count is recorded) with a deduction from their benefit due to a sanction. This is different to the data on sanction decisions, which uses the total number of decisions across a whole month.

In March 2020, 0.02% of people in the ESA (WRAG) had a deduction taken from their personal allowance as a result of a sanction.

The experimental monthly rate of ESA (WRAG) claimants with a sanction deduction has fallen steadily from its peak of 1.05% in April 2014.

7.2 ESA (WRAG): Sanction decisions and reasons – Official Statistics

The total number of ESA (WRAG) sanction decisions has continued to fall since May 2017, to 0 in July 2020. It is expected that as UC full service continues to roll out and claimants move from ESA (WRAG) to UC, the ESA (WRAG) sanctions will remain low (in-line with the fall in the number of ESA (WRAG) claimants).

ESA (WRAG) has a high proportion of decisions that are subsequently changed. As the data is overwritten by the latest decisions each quarter, the number of adverse decisions in the last month of the previous quarter can drop by over 30%.

19% of original decisions since December 2012 have resulted in a sanction being applied.

Summary of decision reasons, August 2019 to July 2020

All decisions made by reason group Latest Year Latest Year (%) Latest Quarter
Failure to Participate in Work-Related Activity 10 2.8 0
Failure to Attend Mandatory Interview 170 94.9 0
Total 180 100 0

Notes:

  1. Disclosure control has been applied to this data for confidentiality purposes. Due to this, totals may not be the sum of the individual data breakdowns.
  2. For a full breakdown of the adverse decision reasons, see the methodology document.
  3. Proportions have been removed for the latest quarter, where the overall number of sanction decisions is low. This has been done because the disclosure control applied to the data could cause a misleading representation when calculating percentages.

Trends are driven by work related activity sanction decisions. 92% of sanction decisions for ESA (WRAG) relate to failure to participate in work related activity since December 2012. There has been a change in this trend over time, as claimants have moved from ESA (WRAG) to UC following a change in circumstance or have been diverted to UC instead of ESA (WRAG). In the latest year, 95% of all sanction decisions were made due to failure to attend a mandatory interview.

7.3 ESA (WRAG): Benefit sanction durations – Experimental Statistics

The figures for benefit sanction durations are calculated based on sanctions that have ended, using the number of weeks that a claimant has a drop in their benefit payments to determine the length of the sanction. This means that if someone has multiple sanctions which are served without a break in deductions, this will be counted as one sanction in the statistics.

81% of ended ESA (WRAG) sanctions lasted 13 weeks or less since December 2012. The average (median) ESA (WRAG) sanction lasted 28 days. See the methodology document for further information on why a median has been used.

Since December 2012, over half (56%) of all sanctions that ended lasted 4 weeks or less, a further 25% lasted between 5 and 13 weeks and 19% lasted over 13 weeks.

ESA (WRAG) sanctions are open-ended until the claimant complies with the interview requirement or work related activity that they failed to attend or participate in.

Once the claimant re-complies, a fixed-length sanction is imposed of 1, 2 or 4 weeks. This means that a sanction of longer than 4 weeks will be due to a claimant failing to re-comply, or where an individual has multiple sanctions which are served without a break in deductions.

7.4 ESA (WRAG): Destinations of claimants receiving a benefit sanction – Experimental Statistics

After receiving an ESA (WRAG) sanction decision, claimants spent an average (mean) of 171 days out of the following 180 days in receipt of benefit (ESA (WRAG), UC, JSA or IS). On average (mean), only 5 of the 180 days were spent on a benefit that was not ESA (WRAG).

In the 180 days following an ESA (WRAG) sanction decision, 0.2% of claimants were not in receipt of any of the tracked benefits (ESA (WRAG), UC, JSA or IS). 90.8% of claimants spent over 150 days (5 months) in receipt of benefit and 85.0% of claimants spent the full 180 days in receipt of benefit.

8. About these statistics

The statistics in this publication are for Great Britain. We also publish a number of background and methodology documents.

Other National and Official Statistics

Read about other National and Official Statistics produced by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP).

Users can also:

Changes, revisions and known issues

The following information is about changes, revisions and known issues with the statistics.

Statistics covered in this bulletin include data for sanction decisions during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Although legislative changes to disapply work-search and work availability requirements were effective between 30 March 2020 and 30 June 2020 (in response to the pandemic), some sanction decisions for these types of failures could have been made during this time period because decisions are often made and processed after the date that the claimant failure occurred. This means that it was possible for sanction decisions to be recorded after legislation changes came into effect, in instances where a claimant prior to 30 March 2020 has failed to meet the work requirements set out in their claimant commitment. Additionally, sanction decisions were also possible for some failures which occurred after this date, for example, for leaving a job voluntarily without good reason or for misconduct.

Conditionality has been generally reintroduced from the 30 June, and new and revised claimant commitments for UC claimants are being reintroduced from 1 July 2020 on a phased approach and as capacity allows (3rd August for Legacy JSA new claims). Claimants can only receive sanctions for failure to meet commitments once they have a new or updated tailored claimant commitment in place.

This impacts data for Universal Credit (UC) and Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) sanctions.

Suspension of UC sanction durations and median statistics

While carrying out a detailed investigation of the sanctions data to improve the methodology, it has been identified that the complex code used to process the data for UC sanction durations statistics was not performing as expected. This was complicated further by the combination and substantially different methods of processing data from the separate UC full service and UC live service systems. The measures affected are the sanction duration and median sanction length. While we consult with data engineers and architects to understand the complex data, and conduct further in depth investigations into the code, both of these series are being suspended for UC live service and UC full service from this release.

We are carrying out further investigative work on sanction durations, and aim to revise the complete series for sanction duration and median sanction length statistics on the basis of the improved methodology on the 15 December 2020. Previous publications will not be revised, as the full time series will be included within the December release.

Figures for UC full service adverse decisions, UC live service decisions and destinations and all legacy benefit measures are unaffected.

UC rate methodology

Initial investigation into the UC full service rate code and methodology – with the intent of including open sanctions in the rate – has highlighted that the methodology currently used to calculate the UC rate differs from that described in previous published statistics, with open sanctions already being included in the measure for UC full service. As the rate already includes open sanctions, no further work is required to improve this aspect of the methodology. As we are currently still investigating if this is also the case for UC live service we are removing UC live service from the rate and will publish UC full service only from April 2019. We will reinstate the UC live service rate as soon as possible, following the finalisation of investigations and successful completion of quality assurance processes. Figures for UC full service adverse decisions, UC live service decisions and destinations and all legacy benefit measures are unaffected.

Freezing of UC live service statistics

New claims to UC live service ceased in January 2018, and since then the remaining live service cases have been gradually migrated to UC full service. This has resulted in a gradual decrease in the number of live service sanction decisions. At the end of March 2019, the systems that were used to administer live service cases were shut down and no further original sanction decisions were made on this service. The UC live service decisions measures found in this section have continued to be updated to capture any outstanding decisions information for mandatory reconsiderations and appeals.

As the numbers for UC live service mandatory reconsiderations and appeals have continued to decrease, they have been impacted by the disclosure controls that are applied to this data for confidentiality purposes. As a result, we have taken the decision to freeze all statistics for UC live service from the current release. If you have any concerns or feedback on this decision please contact the Employment Programmes and Sanction Statistics team at epass.team@dwp.gov.uk.

Migration from UC live service to UC full service

New claims to UC live service ceased in January 2018, and since then the remaining live service cases have been gradually migrated to UC full service. This has resulted in a gradual decrease in the number of live service sanction decisions. By 1 April 2019, the systems that were used to administer live service cases were shut down. Due to this, data for any original UC live service sanction decisions has been frozen from this point. Users should be mindful that this is also evident in the combined UC live and full service sanctions durations and rate data, and caution should be taken when comparing data before and after 1st April 2019. Work is currently underway to develop more data for UC full service, and the aim is to release this as and when it is available.

Migration of JSA and ESA claims to UC full service

In the May 2019 release, it was noted that JSA and ESA (WRAG) claims were closed when claimants were migrated to UC full service, resulting in both an increase in the number of claimants included in the JSA and ESA (WRAG) rate and retrospective changes to previously published rates.

Comparison across different benefits

Users should be aware that there are differences between sanctions policy across benefits that will affect comparisons. Whilst the same methodology has been used to produce these statistics the benefits themselves are very different and require interpretation based on the rules of the specific benefit. The sanctions process means that the outcome of a sanction is subject to retrospective changes which should be considered when using the decision data.

Interpretation of data and the sanction process

Care must be taken when interpreting the duration charts and figures as, for fair comparisons, sufficient time must have passed before longer duration categories can be achieved, for example, sanctions lasting 27 weeks or more starting in January 2016 would not begin to be cleared until July 2016. Deductions can end for a number of reasons, such as the claimant leaves benefit, transfers to a different conditionality group, or the claimant is earning enough on UC that they no longer have any standard allowance from which a deduction can be taken. These statistics include those sanctions which subsequently go on to be overturned. Claimants whose sanction is overturned will be repaid any deduction. When a claimant leaves benefit following a sanction start, but before the sanction is served, the claim end date is taken to be the sanction end date. In the cases where a sanction end date is the same date as the sanction start (the claimant serves zero days of sanction), the cases are not counted as a sanction served and are excluded from the data.

Contact information and feedback

For more information, please contact Tracy Hills on the Employment Programmes and Sanction Statistics team at epass.team@dwp.gov.uk.

DWP would like to hear your views on our statistical publications. If you use any of our statistics publications, we would be interested in hearing what you use them for and how well they meet your requirements. Please email DWP at stats-consultation@dwp.gov.uk.

Users can also join the “Welfare and Benefit Statistics” community at StatsUserNet. DWP announces items of interest to users via this forum, as well as replying to users’ questions.

ISBN: 978-1-78659-191-3