Universal Credit claimants are set to receive higher payments this month or next following the Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP) annual benefit rate increase introduced in April.
Some households could see payments rise by around 6.1 per cent under the updated rates.
However, not all claimants will receive the increase at the same time because Universal Credit operates under what the DWP describes as the “first full period” rule.
Unlike many other benefits, where updated rates appear in the first payment after April 6, Universal Credit increases depend on a claimant’s assessment period.
That means some recipients may not receive the higher amount until June.
Universal Credit assessment periods normally run for one month, with payments issued around seven days after the period ends.
Claimants only qualify for the higher rates once they complete an entire assessment period that begins after the new benefit rates came into force on April 6.
The benefits organisation Turn2Us explained: “For many benefits, the new rates will take effect from April 7.”
Universal Credit payment rise explained as some claimants wait until June for increase
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“However, for some Universal Credit claimants, increased rates will take effect around June. This is because the new rate won’t be paid until the first assessment period that begins on or after April 7.”
The difference in payment timing depends entirely on when a claimant’s assessment cycle begins. For example, someone whose assessment period started on April 4 would complete that cycle on May 3 and receive payment around May 10.
Because the assessment period began before the new rates took effect, that payment would still use the previous rates.
Their next assessment period would then run from May 4 to June 3, meaning the increased payment would not arrive until around June 10. By contrast, a claimant whose assessment period began on April 8 and finished on May 7 would receive the increased amount around May 14.
Claimants only qualify for the higher rates once they complete an entire assessment period
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The variation means some households will receive the uplift several weeks earlier than others.
This year’s increase combines the standard annual inflation-linked rise with an additional uplift to Universal Credit’s standard allowance. DWP benefits usually increase in line with inflation, which stood at 3.8 per cent for the 2026/27 uprating calculation.
Universal Credit standard allowances are also receiving an additional 2.3 per cent increase, bringing the total rise to approximately 6.1 per cent.
Labour said the changes are intended to “rebalance” Universal Credit payments.
Parliamentary documents stated the policy aims to achieve this “by increasing the basic standard allowance that all claimants receive, while reducing the additional payments for most claimants newly found to have disabilities and health conditions that affect their capability for work”.
Labour projections suggest the Universal Credit standard allowance will be 4.8 per cent higher by 2029/30 than it would have been without the changes.
The DWP said claimants do not need to take any action to receive the increased payments, as adjustments are applied automatically once the relevant assessment period has been completed.

