Benefits Cap Calculator UK 2025
Check if the UK benefit cap applies to you — and whether you are exempt. Covers 2025 cap rates for London and outside London.
Last updated: February 2026 | Author: Mustafa Bilgic (MB)
2025 Benefit Cap Rates
Greater London
Outside Greater London
Benefits Cap Calculator
Answer the questions below to find out if the benefit cap affects you, and by how much.
Do you receive any of the following? (These may exempt you)
Enter your total weekly benefits (capped benefits only — see list below)
What is the Benefit Cap?
The benefit cap is a limit on the total amount of certain benefits that working-age households can receive each week. It was introduced in 2013 and applies across Great Britain. The cap does not apply in Northern Ireland, which operates a separate benefit system.
The cap is intended to ensure that benefit income does not exceed what a typical working household might earn after tax. It primarily affects households with high housing costs (particularly in London and the South East), large families, or those claiming multiple benefits.
In practice, a relatively small proportion of claimants are affected by the cap — approximately 74,000 households nationally, according to DWP statistics. Many households who initially appear to be over the cap turn out to be exempt due to disability benefits or working hours.
Benefits Included in and Excluded from the Cap
Benefits COUNTED towards the cap
- Universal Credit (most elements)
- Child Benefit
- Housing Benefit (legacy system)
- Child Tax Credit
- Working Tax Credit (if also on another capped benefit)
- Bereavement Allowance / Widowed Parent’s Allowance
- Maternity Allowance
- Severe Disablement Allowance
- Incapacity Benefit
- Income Support
- Jobseeker’s Allowance
- ESA (WRAG component only)
Benefits NOT counted (exempt from cap)
- Personal Independence Payment (PIP)
- Disability Living Allowance (DLA)
- Attendance Allowance
- Carer’s Allowance
- ESA (Support Group component)
- UC with LCWRA element
- War Widow/Widower’s Pension
- Armed Forces Compensation
- Council Tax Support
- Free School Meals
- Healthy Start vouchers
- Discretionary Housing Payments
Exemptions from the Benefit Cap
You are completely exempt from the benefit cap if you or your partner receive any of the following:
- Working Tax Credit — even a nominal award of £0.01
- Personal Independence Payment (PIP)
- Disability Living Allowance (DLA) — any component
- Attendance Allowance
- Carer’s Allowance
- ESA Support Group component or its Universal Credit equivalent (LCWRA element)
- Industrial Injuries Disablement Benefit
- War Widow’s/Widower’s Pension or Armed Forces Compensation
Additionally, if any child in the household receives DLA or PIP, the entire household is exempt from the cap.
People who are over State Pension age are also exempt, as are people with no work-related requirements (though they may still receive UC with LCWRA which also exempts them).
There is also a 9-month grace period during which the cap does not apply if you or your partner were previously in continuous employment for the previous 12 months, or if you have recently lost a job through no fault of your own.
How the Benefit Cap Is Applied
For Universal Credit claimants: The DWP calculates your total weekly income from capped benefits. If this exceeds the cap, your UC is reduced by the amount of the excess. The cap is usually applied to the housing element first. If the housing element is already zero, other UC elements are reduced.
For Housing Benefit claimants (those still on legacy benefits): The council reduces your Housing Benefit award by the amount you are over the cap.
Note: If you are capped while receiving Housing Benefit (legacy system) and you move to UC, the UC cap will apply differently — it is important to check the impact before making any transition.
Benefit Cap Rates Table
| Household Type | Location | Weekly Cap | Monthly Cap | Annual Cap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Families with children / single parents | Greater London | £442.31 | £1,916.67 | £23,000 |
| Families with children / single parents | Outside London | £384.62 | £1,666.67 | £20,000 |
| Single adults (no dependent children) | Greater London | £296.35 | £1,283.17 | £15,410 |
| Single adults (no dependent children) | Outside London | £257.69 | £1,116.67 | £13,400 |
How to Avoid the Benefit Cap
There are several legitimate ways to avoid being subject to the benefit cap:
- Work enough hours: If you work sufficient hours to be entitled to Working Tax Credit (16 hours/week for lone parents, 24 hours for couples without disabilities, 16 hours for people with a disability), you are exempt. In practice, since most people have migrated to UC, this effectively means earning at or above the equivalent of the Working Tax Credit hours threshold — contact DWP to clarify your situation.
- Claim disability benefits: If you have a health condition or disability and have not yet applied for PIP, doing so (and being awarded it) would exempt you from the cap. PIP is not means-tested and is available to working-age people with a long-term health condition or disability.
- Move to a cheaper area: If your housing costs are driving you over the cap, moving to an area with lower rents may bring your total benefits below the cap. This is not always practical, but Discretionary Housing Payments from your local council may be available to bridge the gap temporarily.
- Negotiate lower rent: Some landlords will negotiate reduced rent for reliable long-term tenants. Even a small reduction could bring total benefits below the cap level.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the benefit cap in 2025?
Which benefits are included in the benefit cap?
Who is exempt from the benefit cap?
How is the benefit cap applied?
Can I appeal the benefit cap?
How can I avoid the benefit cap?
Does the benefit cap affect everyone on benefits?
Related Calculators and Guides
- Universal Credit Rates 2026 — Full UC payment amounts and elements
- PIP Benefits Guide — How PIP works, rates, and eligibility (also exempts from cap)
- Housing Benefit Calculator — Calculate housing benefit entitlement
- Income Tax Calculator — See how much more you keep by working
- Child Benefit Calculator — How much Child Benefit are you entitled to?