[Skip to Content]
Disability Benefit Cuts Will Push People into Homelessness, Warns St Martin's Charity CEO

Disability Benefit Cuts Will Push People into Homelessness, Warns St Martin's Charity CEO

Disability Benefit Cuts Will Push People into Homelessness, Warns St Martin's Charity CEO

Thursday, April 3, 2025

The welfare cuts confirmed in the Spring Statement risk pushing thousands of people into poverty, and toward homelessness.

Duncan Shrubsole, our Chief Executive, told Inside Housing that tightening eligibility for personal independence payment (PIP) could cause “massive issues” for housing and housing benefit “which haven’t necessarily been clocked”. Read excerpts from the piece below:

“What hasn’t been appreciated is the way PIP is a passport to other benefits,” he said, which has two implications for housing.

First, if someone, their partner, or any children living with them get PIP they are currently exempt from the benefit cap. The cap ranges from £284 a week for a single adult outside London to £487 a week for a couple or single parent in the capital.

Having their housing benefit capped could make accommodation unaffordable for large families, Mr Shrubsole said. In addition, given Local Housing Allowance (LHA) and housing benefit rates are usually too low to cover rents, many people already draw on other benefits to cover their rents.

“People could face a real double whammy – less housing benefit, meaning an even bigger gap between rents and benefit levels, plus significantly less benefits to make up that housing benefit shortfall,” he said.

Large families “may well lose accommodation they have been moved into or no longer be able to move into it”, he added.

Second, if someone is under 35 and claiming PIP then they can also claim the LHA one-bed rate, rather than the shared accommodation rate, which can be more than £100 a week lower.

Young single people who are seeking rehousing could therefore be pushed into shared accommodation, which can be “incredibly challenging” for them, Mr Shrubsole said.

Under the government’s reforms, people aged under 22 could also lose any ability to access PIP. “There is a group of particularly vulnerable young people who can’t live at home,” he said. “That will raise youth homelessness.”

Read the full piece in Inside Housing here.

 

News and Views

  • Brain Injury Guidance

    Brain Injury Guidance

    Leigh Andrews of Change Communication offered specialist advice on brain injuries and homelessness through a digital...
  • End Furniture Poverty Survey

    End Furniture Poverty Survey

    End Furniture Poverty have recently spoken with the Frontline Network to discuss their important ongoing survey, seek...
  • Cover the Cost Campaign

    Cover the Cost Campaign

    Jasmine Basran, Senior Policy Officer at Crisis, talks to us about the Cover the Cost Campaign, asking the Government...
  • VRF Impact Report 2018/19

    VRF Impact Report 2018/19

    Over the past year we have given out 3827 grants totaling £1,156,805 through the VRF. Read the latest Impact Report t...
  • Influence from the Frontline

    Influence from the Frontline

    Frontline workers are crucial at giving insight into the viewpoints of the people they work with as well as the chall...
  • The Vagrancy Act

    The Vagrancy Act

    Crisis, along with others including Homeless Link, Cymorth Cymru, Centrepoint, St Mungo’s, Shelter Cymru and the Wall...
  • Influencing local decisions

    Influencing local decisions

    Zoe, Frontline Network Coordinator at Coventry Citizens Advice, talks to us about the Coventry Frontline Network and...
  • The Litigant in Person Network

    The Litigant in Person Network

    Martha de la Roche, Network Development Manager at Litigant in Person Network (LiP Network), tells us about The LiP N...
  • VRF Impact Report

    VRF Impact Report

    Find out what impact VRF had last year and how to get involved in shaping its direction in the coming year.
  • Housing First Scotland

    Housing First Scotland

    Please see here for the first issue of Housing First Connect - a twice-yearly newsletter for Scotland’s new Housing F...
  • Slaying the Dragon

    Slaying the Dragon

    Will Golding, Edinburgh Tutor at Crisis, talks to us about 'Slaying the Dragon'.
  • CPAG - Early Warning System

    CPAG - Early Warning System

    Dan Norris, from CPAG, talks to us about a new Early Warning System to record the impact of benefit changes implement...
  • The Hostile Environment

    The Hostile Environment

    Bethan Lant, a Project lead from Praxis, writes about the creation of a hostile environment for migrants and refugees.
  • Wrexham’s Crisis Cafe

    Wrexham’s Crisis Cafe

    Sinead Kelleher writes about Wrexham's Crisis Cafe, a multi-agency response to Universal Credit.
  • Frontline Worker Survey

    Frontline Worker Survey

    We are asking frontline workers to participate in a survey, aimed at those working with clients who are experiencing...
  • A map through conflict

    A map through conflict

    A Cyrenians Mediator writes about their innovative Amber Mediation and Support Project, a model of mediation and supp...
  •  “A place to call home"

    “A place to call home"

    Hannah Gousy was seconded from Crisis to the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) to help design policy recommendations to...
  • A London Nightshelter

    A London Nightshelter

    On 7 November we opened our church-based shelters for the winter with more churches signed on then ever before. Glass...
  • 'Step Up' at The Connection

    'Step Up' at The Connection

    Wyn Newman introduces the volunteer programme 'Step Up' that has been developed at The Connection for service users.