Eligible families with three or more children will receive higher Universal Credit payments following the abolition of the two-child limit from April 6
Families receiving Universal Credit are set to see increased payments this year following a significant rule change implemented last month, which abolished the longstanding two-child limit. The restriction preventing claims for support beyond two children was lifted on 6 April, meaning households will now receive the child element for every child in their care.
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has confirmed that while the change has already taken effect, owing to Universal Credit’s payment structure – with payments issued monthly – claimants will only notice the increase this month or in June.
The DWP stated the timing varies according to each claimant’s monthly assessment period, which dictates when Universal Credit is calculated and distributed.
Until now, most families could only claim the child element of Universal Credit for their first two children, unless they met certain exemptions, reports the Daily Record. This policy, referred to as the ‘two-child limit’, has now been scrapped.
Consequently, families with three or more children can now access additional monthly support for each subsequent child, boosting their total Universal Credit entitlement. The change applies throughout the Universal Credit system, benefiting both new and existing claimants.
The child element of Universal Credit is worth:
- £333.33 a month for a first child (born before April 6, 2017)
- £287.92 a month for each additional child
This means households will now be eligible to receive an additional £287.92 monthly for each extra child who was previously excluded from their claim. Annually, this amounts to over £3,400 per child.
While the policy amendment came into force from April 6, payments will only rise after a claimant completes the first full monthly assessment period following that date.
This means:
- Some households will see higher payments this month
- Others will not receive the increase until June
DWP guidance states that the exact timing will vary depending on individual payment cycles. There is no requirement to submit a fresh claim or contact DWP, as the amendments should be implemented automatically.
However, claimants are encouraged to review their Universal Credit statements to confirm the correct number of children are reflected in their award. Further information on how the changes operate, including eligibility and payment timings, is available on GOV.UK.



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