Benefit cap: number of households capped to November 2024
Published 18 March 2025
The benefit cap is a limit on the total amount of benefit that most working age people can get and affects a number of benefits.
The amount of benefit a household receives is reduced to ensure claimants do not receive more than the cap limit. The benefit cap can be applied through either:
-
Universal Credit (UC)
-
Housing Benefit (HB)
The benefit cap was introduced in April 2013 and was initially applied via HB, and subsequently to UC as it was rolled out. The majority of claims are now capped via UC, however, a small number of the working age population may still apply for HB. Read about who can get HB and completing the move to UC.
This release covers data to November 2024. The current benefit cap levels, which were last increased in April 2023 are as follows:
-
£22,020 per year (or £14,753 for single adults with no children) nationally
-
£25,323 per year (£16,967 for single adults with no children) in Greater London
The previous benefit cap levels can be found in our background information and methodology document.
It is important to note that the DWP annual benefit uprating which happens annually in April can have an impact on benefit cap statistical trends.
Figures within this release have been rounded in line with our rounding policy. Figures in the text and tables within this bulletin may not sum due to rounding. Figures in the graphs are plotted using unrounded numbers.
This release is accompanied by statistical data tables, which contain figures from the latest quarter. Full data, including all historic data, is available on Stat-Xplore.
1. Main stories
The main stories are:
-
113,000 households had their benefit capped at November 2024:
- 112,000 (98%) households were capped on UC at November 2024
- 1,800 (2%) households were capped on HB at November 2024
-
At November 2024, the total number of capped households has decreased by 5% (5,800) since the previous quarter (August 2024):
-
volumes of UC capped households have decreased by 4% (4,500) since the previous quarter (August 2024)
-
volumes of HB capped households have decreased by 43% (1,400) since the previous quarter (August 2024)
-
-
1.6% of working age households claiming HB or UC had their benefits capped at November 2024. This is a decrease from 1.7% of households that had their benefit capped at last quarter (August 2024)
-
the weekly average cap amount was £60 at November 2024, which is a decrease from £61 at August 2024
The number of households that flowed on and off the cap between August 2024 and November 2024
Source: DWP Universal Credit Quarterly Statistics and DWP Housing Benefit Caseload Statistics to November 2024.
In the latest quarter for households capped on HB:
-
the number of households that had their HB capped decreased by 43% from 3,200 at August 2024 to 1,800 at November 2024
-
1,400 households remained capped on HB at November 2024
-
1,900 households off-flowed from the benefit cap, which means no longer on the benefit cap between August 2024 and October 2024. Of the 1,900 off-flows, 81% (1,500 households) were no longer claiming HB. Of the households no longer claiming HB, 86%(1,300) are now claiming UC
-
550 households moved from HB to UC and continued to be capped (between August 2024 and October 2024)
-
290 households were newly capped, which means they were on the HB benefit cap caseload for the first time between August 2024 and October 2024
-
Of the 290 newly capped HB households, 80 were also off-flows within the same time-period (August 2024 and October 2024)
-
140 households returned to the HB cap that had been capped prior to, but not at, November 2024
In the latest quarter for households capped on UC:
-
the number of households that had their UC capped at November 2024 was 112,000, a 4% decrease from 116,000, at August 2024
-
68,000 households remained capped on UC at November 2024
-
there were 47,000 households that off-flowed from the benefit cap between (August 2024 and October 2024)
-
550 households moved from HB to UC and continued to be capped (between August 2024 and October 2024. In this case it is not the first time the household was on the benefit cap, rather the first time it was capped under UC
-
26,000 were newly capped between August 2024 and October 2024
-
12,000 returned to the UC cap that had been capped prior to, but not at, August 2024
-
26,000 households (26,000 newly capped and 550 that have moved from the HB cap) flowed on to the UC cap. Of these, 11,000 also flowed off the cap within the same time period (between August 2024 and October 2024)
2. The number of capped households in GB
At November 2024, 113,000 households had their benefits capped in GB:
-
112,000 were capped on UC
-
1,800 were capped on HB
The total number of capped households has decreased by 5% (5,800) when compared to the previous quarter (August 2024).
Monthly number of UC and HB capped households from November 2013 to November 2024
Source: Benefit Cap HB point in time caseload and UC point in time caseload statistics to November 2024, Stat Xplore
Note: This graph is plotted using monthly point in time figures.
The benefit cap was introduced from April 2013 for households in receipt of HB. UC later came into the scope of the benefit cap in October 2016. Capped households claiming UC steadily increased from 350 households in (October 2016) to 11,000 households when UC was fully rolled out in December 2018. Up until this point, the changes to the overall capped caseload were driven by HB capped households, which reached 67,000 households in June 2017, following the decision to lower cap levels at November 2016. The HB capped caseload remained stable until August 2017 (65,000 households).
Following the completion of GB-wide roll out of UC in December 2018, the households capped on UC increased due to:
-
the majority of new claimants no longer being able to apply for legacy benefits, only UC
-
HB claimants moving onto UC
The UC capped caseload overtook the HB capped caseload in October 2019, with 36,000 HB households capped and 38,000 UC households capped. Since then, HB capped households have continued to steadily decrease to 1,800 households at November 2024
Between March 2020 and April 2020, at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the UC capped caseload increased by 92%, from 58,000 households to 110,000 households. From April 2020 until March 2021 the number of households capped on UC increased to a peak of 160,000. The number of households capped on UC decreased sharply from March 2021 to November 2021, with a 40% (66,000 households) decrease to 98,000 households.
From October 2021 until April 2023, the monthly number of households capped under UC remained relatively stable, fluctuating between 95,000 and 110,000 households. However, May 2023 saw a 22% decrease (21,000 households) when compared to April 2023. The majority of this decrease was due to the increased benefit cap levels which were implemented from April 2023. After this, the number of households capped under UC figures fluctuated between 67,000 and 75,000 between May 2023 and March 2024, before a steep increase at May 2024 to 113,000 households, coinciding with the annual uprating of DWP benefits and increase in Local Housing allowance. From May 2024 to August 2024, the number of capped households under UC rose to 116,000 households, before falling to 112,000 at November 2024.
Please note, some of these comparisons are at a monthly level and therefore figures and percentages may be different to quarterly comparisons.
26,000 households (UC and HB) were newly capped in the latest quarter.
The number of newly capped households at November 2024 decreased from the previous quarter
Quarterly total number of newly capped UC and HB households from November 2013 to November 2024
Source: Benefit Cap HB cumulative and UC cumulative caseload statistics to November 2024, Stat-Xplore
26,000 households had their benefits capped for the first time this quarter (August 2024 to October 2024). This is a decrease from last quarter (May 2024 to July 2024) where 39,000 households were capped for the first time.
Note: Newly capped households are those that have their benefits capped for the very first time. For UC, this excludes off-flows from the HB cap who then immediately become capped under UC. Figures may refer to different time periods.
Numbers of UC households that flowed off the cap increased for the latest quarter
Quarterly total number of households that have flowed off the UC and HB cap from November 2013 to November 2024
Source: Benefit Cap HB cumulative and UC cumulative caseload statistics to November 2024, Stat-Xplore
In the quarter to November 2024, 47,000 households left the UC cap, an increase from 31,000 households at the previous quarter ending (August 2024). Of these off-flows, 23% (11,000 households) were also on-flows during this quarter. This means that these households had their UC capped for the first time and left the cap during this quarter.
The number of quarterly off-flows from UC steadily increased to 5,400 at the quarter ending November 2019. The increase has been greater since the quarter ending February 2020, with a peak number of UC off-flows at November 2021 (45,000) which coincided with the withdrawal of the temporary £20 uplift to UC in October 2021.
Following this, the quarterly number of UC off-flows fluctuated between 18,000 and 22,000 until a large increase in the quarter to May 2023 (33,000). The elevated levels of UC off-flows in this quarter should be seen in the context of the increased benefit cap levels which were implemented from April 2023. Following this, the quarterly number of UC off-flows decreased significantly in the quarter to August 2023 (15,000) and have since risen to 47,000 at November 2024.
In the quarter to November 2024, 7% (3,500) of UC households that flowed off the cap, left the cap due to having employment earnings at, or over, the employment earnings threshold. The remaining 93% (44,000) left due to other reasons; examples include a household’s benefit income has reduced under the cap level, a household is in receipt of an exempting benefit, or a household is no longer claiming UC. This compares to 7% (2,300) of UC households that left due to earning over the earnings threshold, and 93% (28,000) leaving the cap due to other reasons, in the quarter to August 2024.
The employment earnings exemption threshold is subject to change each financial year. The earnings exemption threshold is £793 for the Financial Year Ending (FYE) 2025. Details of previous exemption threshold levels can be found in the background information and methodology document.
Off-flow outcomes are shown as at the end of the quarter in which a household moved off the benefit cap, meaning the outcomes are fixed at that point, unless a household is capped again at a later date. More detail on the way off-flow outcomes are determined is included in the background information and methodology document.
In the quarter to November 2024, 1,900 households left the HB cap. Of the 1,900 off-flows, 81% (1,500 households) were no longer claiming HB. Of these, 86% (1,300) of households no longer claiming HB are now claiming UC.
3. Characteristics of capped households
84% of households (HB and UC) that are currently capped include children.
At November 2024, 84% (96,000) of households that had their benefits capped included children. In UC, 85% (95,000) of capped households included children and in HB, 59% (1,100) of capped households included children.
Of the households including children, capped at November 2024:
-
92% (88,000) had between 1 and 4 children
-
8% (8,000) had 5 or more children
Proportion of UC and HB capped households by number of children at November 2024
Source: Benefit Cap HB point in time caseload and UC point in time caseload statistics to November 2024, Stat Xplore
Both Child Tax Credit (CTC) and Child Benefit (CHB) can be claimed alongside HB. UC claimants can receive CHB and, where applicable, receive the UC child element instead of CTC. CHB, CTC and UC are all in scope for the benefit cap, so households in receipt of these benefits or elements are more likely to exceed the cap limit and be capped if they are not exempt.
The majority (69%) of households that have their benefits capped continues to be single parent families.
Proportion of capped households by household type from February 2019 to November 2024
Source: Benefit Cap HB point in time caseload and UC point in time caseload statistics to November 2024, Stat Xplore
Note: This graph is plotted using quarterly point in time figures.
-
the proportion of single parent households continued to increase quarter on quarter from 60% at February 2021 to 70% at August 2022. It then remained stable until May 2023, when it rose to 74% but has since decreased to 69% at November 2024
-
single-person households with no children steadily decreased from 16% at August 2021 to 13% at May 2022. Following a slight increase to 14% at February 2023, this fell to 10% at May 2023, and has since risen gradually to 15% at November 2024
-
households of couples with children gradually decreased from 25% at February 2021 to 16% at February 2023. This has since decreased very slightly, and in the latest quarter to November 2024 the proportion for households of couples with children is 15%
-
households of couples with no children account for a negligible amount of the total capped caseload, continuously accounting for between 0% and 0.1% since February 2019
Over half of all single-parent households capped on UC have a youngest child under the age of 5 at November 2024.
Number of capped UC single parent households (thousands) by age of youngest child at November 2024.
Source: DWP Universal Credit Quarterly Statistics, DWP Housing Benefit Caseload Statistics to November 2024.
Note: Information on the age of youngest child for capped Housing Benefit households has been suspended for this release of the Benefit Cap statistics.
Suspension of age of youngest child data for capped Housing Benefit households
At November 2024, 44,000 (57%) of single-parent UC capped households have at least one child aged under 5 years, with 21,000 (26%) of single-parent UC capped households having a child aged under 2 years.
The proportion of working-age households claiming benefits that have their benefit capped (for UC and HB combined) was 1.6% at November 2024 a decrease from 1.7% at August 2024.
The proportion of UC claiming households that are capped is greatest in the English Local Authorities, especially in the London region
Proportion of UC households capped at Local Authority level at November 2024
Source: DWP Universal Credit Quarterly Statistics and Benefit Cap UC point in time caseload statistics at November 2024. Stat-Xplore
The proportion of households claiming UC that had their benefits capped at November 2024 was 1.8%, which is a decrease from 2% as at the previous quarter (August 2024). The London region continues to have the highest proportion of UC households affected by the benefit cap, with 3.7% capped at November 2024, a decrease from 3.9% at August 2024.
Of the 10 Local Authorities (LAs) with the highest proportion of UC households having their benefits capped at November 2024, 5 of them are in the London region, 3 are in the South East region and 2 are in the Eastern region. 9 of the LAs were among the top 10 with the highest proportion of UC households having their benefits capped at August 2024.
At November 2024 Scotland remains the region with the lowest proportion of UC households capped at 0.6%, which is the same as at August 2024.
The proportion of HB claiming households that are capped is greatest in English LAs
Proportion of HB households capped at Local Authority level at November 2024
Source: DWP Housing Benefit Caseload Statistics and Benefit Cap HB point in time caseload statistics at November 2024. Stat-Xplore
Note: LAs which are shaded grey in the above maps could be due to several factors such as data being sparse and/or missing.
0.2% of working age households claiming HB had their benefits capped at November 2024, which is a decrease from 0.3% last quarter (August 2024). The London region continues to have the highest proportion of HB households affected by the benefit cap, with 0.5% of households capped at November 2024, which is a decrease from 0.6% at last quarter (August 2024).
At November 2024, Scotland remains the region with the lowest proportion of HB households capped at 0.1%, the same as at August 2024.
4. The financial impact of being capped
Households had their benefits capped by an average of £60 per week (when combining HB and UC) at November 2024, a decrease from £61 last quarter (August 2024).
The average weekly amount capped for UC and HB combined has decreased by £1 at November 2024 when compared to last quarter
Weekly capped amount for UC and HB households from February 2019 to November 2024
Source: DWP Universal Credit Quarterly Statistics and DWP Housing Benefit Caseload Statistics to November 2024
Note: This graph is plotted using quarterly point in time figures.
The average amount that households are capped by on both UC and HB remained broadly comparable since November 2022 to February 2024.
At November 2024, the average amount that UC households are capped by is £259 per assessment period. This is the equivalent of £60 per week. This is a decrease from £263 per assessment period, or £61 per week at August 2024.
The average weekly amount that HB households are capped by is £56 at November 2024 which is a decrease from £61 at August 2024.
Note: UC is assessed and paid monthly and the benefit cap is applied to the full UC award. For these statistics, a weekly cap equivalent has been calculated for UC households by dividing the amount a household has been capped by in an assessment period (which lasts one month) by 4.33.
The difference in average cap amounts across the two benefits may be affected by the differences in their caseload compositions and the different entitlement conditions across the benefits.
The benefit cap is applied to the full UC award not just to housing costs. Therefore, direct comparisons of cap amounts across HB and UC should not be made.
Proportion of UC capped households by cap amount at November 2024
At November 2024:
-
57% (63,000) of households that had their UC capped were capped by the equivalent of £50 or less per week
-
25% (28,000) were capped by the equivalent of £50.01 to £100 per week
-
10% (11,000) were capped by the equivalent of £100.01 to £150 per week
-
4% (4,800) were capped by the equivalent of £150.01 to £200 per week
-
3% (3,800) were capped by the equivalent of more than £200 a week, including 0.9% (1,000) capped by the equivalent of more than £300 per week
6. About these statistics
Suspension of age of youngest child data for capped Housing Benefit households
Information on the age of youngest child for capped Housing Benefit households continues to be suspended for this release of the Benefit Cap statistics. This is due to an issue with the quality of the HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) statistical Child Benefit data, which is still being investigated. This issue only affects the Benefit Cap statistics and no other DWP statistical releases. We will reinstate the breakdown in the statistical series as soon as possible, in line with the UK Statistics Authority (UKSA) Code of Practice for Statistics.
Quality of Local Authority Data
It is worth noting that the extracts used to create the Housing Benefit data contain administrative data from Local Authority computer systems. Sometimes changes to LA’s IT processes, system conversions or unforeseen events such as cyber-attacks can disrupt the data supply.
Please note caveats and warnings in the accompanying ODS tables and Stat-Xplore where they appear.
Release schedule
The statistics are published quarterly in March, June, September, and December and are sourced from data originally collected via administrative systems.
Next release: 17 June 2025 (number of households capped to February 2025)
Status of these statistics
Our statistical practice is regulated by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR). OSR sets the standards of trustworthiness, quality and value in the Code of Practice for Statistics that all producers of official statistics should adhere to.
You are welcome to contact us directly with any comments about how we meet these standards by emailing the statistical production team: cbm.stats@dwp.gov.uk
Alternatively, you can contact OSR by emailing regulation@statistics.gov.uk or via the OSR website.
Rounding
Volumes and amounts have been rounded as detailed below. Sometimes figures are rounded differently where comparisons between figures are made based on different rounding precisions, or where the rounding of figures could potentially give a misleading picture of the statistics and trends. For more information, please see the Background Information and Methodology document.
Percentages are calculated using numbers prior to rounding and rounded to the nearest whole percentage point.
Range | Rounded to the nearest |
---|---|
0 to 1,000 | 10 |
1,001 to 10,000 | 100 |
10,001 to 100,000 | 1,000 |
100,001 to 1,000,000 | 10,000 |
1,000,001 to 10,000,000 | 100,000 |
10,000,001 to 100,000,000 | 1,000,000 |
Data sources
Note UC statistics throughout this release refer to UCFS only. This is especially important to remember when looking at time series data.
Figures relating to households with their UC capped are subject to retrospection. All UC historic figures in these statistics have been updated as at November 2024. For more information, see the Background Information and Methodology document. The timeseries detailing weekly cap amount does not include retrospection.
The proportion capped figures have been calculated using working age HB and UC household figures obtained from Stat-Xplore. The total number of HB and UC capped households have been divided by the total number of working age households on HB and UC respectively to obtain these figures.
Data period
Figures relating to on-flows, newly capped and off-flows refer to the time period August 2024 to October 2024. Figures relating to remaining capped or returning to the cap refer to the time period August 2024 to November 2024. The difference is due to the methodology used to obtain outcome at off-flow (including households that flow from the HB cap to the UC cap), as it is not possible to obtain outcome data for November 2024, at November 2024.
Where to find out more
Use Stat-Xplore to create your own tables and further breakdowns of these statistics.
Read older releases of these statistics.
Read background information about these statistics.
Read statistics for households who have their benefits capped in Northern Ireland.
Read statistics on HB caseload.
Read statistics on UC.
Read statistics on Local Authorities’ use of Discretionary Housing Payment funds.
Read more information on the benefit cap.
7. User Engagement
Contact us for statistical enquiries and publication feedback only please.
Producers: Michael Agholor
Lead Statistician: Kate Walker
Press enquiries should be directed to the DWP Press Office.
ISBN: 978-1-78659-824-0