MAJOR changes to people’s benefits are coming “within weeks” as more than a million Brits will be shifted onto Universal Credit.
Around 1.7million claimants are due to receive their payments differently as ministers press ahead with moving them off old-style benefits.
The Government’s gradual transfer of claimants from traditional benefits to Universal Credit was paused during the pandemic.
But the “managed migration” to the new UC system will restart shortly – bringing changes for loads of Brits on benefits.
Ten thousand tax credit claimants will be the first batch to be moved across to the new system soon, the Mirror reports.
MORE ON UNIVERSAL CREDIT
Then ministers will start shunting the remaining disability and other benefit claimants onto UC.
The aim is to have everyone on the new UC system by the end of 2024.
Downing Street insists Universal Credit is more generous than old-style benefits.
Universal Credit is a monthly payment for struggling Brits that streamlines old-style benefits like child tax credits, housing benefit and income support into one package.
UC claimants will get more cash in their pockets this month thanks to annual rises in benefit rates.
From April 11 the payments will shoot up by 3.1 per cent in a process known as uprating.
The hike is so benefits payments do not become less valuable as prices in shops increase, although this year inflation has soared by 7 per cent.
The DWP said in November it was “determined” to swap all people onto Universal Credit by December 2024.
The Department’s Permanent Secretary Peter Schofield told MPs: “We got the funding in the spending review to finish this on time.”
Neil Couling, the director general behind Universal Credit, said the move would be a “slow, slow, slow experience” as bureaucrats being processing in “small volumes”.
A DWP spokesperson said: “Universal Credit is a modern dynamic benefit which supports people in and out of work.
Read More on The Sun
“We have always been clear about our ambition to move people over from the legacy systems, which are complex, inefficient and based on aging, inflexible IT.
“The Department will continue its regular engagement with the committee and our ambition remains to see the rollout of Universal Credit delivered safely and on time by 2024.”