Personal Independence Payment: Rochdale

(asked on 6th May 2025) - View Source

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, what recent estimate she has made of the number of people in receipt of the (a) enhanced and (b) standard PIP who were awarded less than four points in all 10 of the daily living activities in the assessment criteria in Rochdale constituency.


Answered by
Stephen Timms Portrait
Stephen Timms
Minister of State (Department for Work and Pensions)
This question was answered on 14th May 2025

For the volume of Personal Independence Payment (PIP) claimants in Rochdale who scored less than four points in all 10 daily living activities in their most recent assessment by award see Table 1 below.

After the reforms PIP expenditure is forecast to rise from £29 billion this financial year to £35 billion in 2029/30, but would be £4 billion higher without these reforms. After taking account of behavioural changes, OBR predict 370,000 claimants at the point of implementation will be affected by 2029/30, equating to 1 in 10 of the PIP caseload in November 2026.

Table 1: Volume of PIP claimants in Rochdale Parliamentary Constituency who scored less than four points in all 10 daily living activities by award rate (January 2025 caseload)

Daily Living Award Rate

Volume of PIP claimants

Standard

3,300

Enhanced

500

Notes:

  • Figures are rounded to the nearest 100.
  • These figures include claims made under normal rules and include new claims and Disability Living Allowance (DLA) to PIP reassessments.
  • Figures include those with Special Rules for End of Life (SREL)
  • There will be no immediate changes. Changes to PIP eligibility and rebalancing of UC aren’t coming into effect immediately. Our intention is these changes will start to come into effect from April 2026 for UC and November 2026 for PIP, subject to parliamentary approval.
  • PIP changes will only apply at the next award review after November 2026. The average award review period is about three years. At the award review, claimants will be seen by a trained assessor or healthcare professional and assessed on individual needs and circumstances.
  • We are consulting on how best to support those who are affected by the new eligibility changes, including how to make sure health and eligible care needs are met. PIP is not based on condition diagnosis but on functional disability as the result of one or more conditions, and is awarded as a contribution to the additional costs which result.
  • We also intend to launch a wider review of the PIP assessment which I will lead, and we will bring together a range of experts, stakeholders and people with lived experience to consider how best to do this and to start the process as part of preparing for a review. We will provide further details as plans progress.
Reticulating Splines