Today, the Department for Work and Pensions has released the
latest experimental statistics on how many households have had
their benefits capped between April 2013 and May 2021. The key
findings from the release are:
- 190,000 households had their benefit capped at May 2021. This
compares with 79,000 at February 2020, an increase of 141% from
this period.
- The 190,000 households is a 5% drop from February 2021.
- Households had their benefits capped by an average of £55 a
week at May 2021. This works out at £238.15 a month.
Responding to the statistics Jon Sparkes, Crisis Chief
Executive, said: “These figures show just how dire the
situation continues to be for people as they battle to keep a
roof over their head. With vital lifelines such as furlough and
the Universal Credit uplift weeks away from ending, thousands
still out of work and others struggling to make ends meet on
insecure zero-hour contracts, more and more people will be left
worrying about how they’re going to be able to afford their rent.
“For many people renting has become completely unaffordable and
with housing benefit once again frozen, this will be adding
further pressure to people’s already strained budgets.
“With the spending review due next month, we are urging the UK
government to invest in Universal Credit, so that people can
continue to pay their rent, and ensure exemptions to the benefit
cap exist to prevent more people from being forced into
homelessness.”