AGE UK strongly oppose the means-testing of Winter Fuel Payment (WFP)

July 30th, 2024

Age UK have posted their reaction to Rachel Reeve's decision to means test Winter Fuel Payments to pensioners.

Age UK estimate that as many as two million pensioners who badly need the money to stay warm this winter will not receive it.

Age UK Winter Fuel Payment statement in full

As many as two million pensioners who badly need the money to stay warm this winter will not receive it and will be in trouble as a result – yet at the other end of the spectrum well-off older people will scarcely notice the difference – a social injustice.

A big reason for this disastrous outcome is that more than one in three pensioners entitled to Pension Credit, the qualifying benefit for WFP under this proposal, don’t receive it, a proportion that’s been roughly constant for many years. More than 800,000 older people living on very low incomes – under £218.25 a week for single pensioners and under £332.95 for couples – who are already missing out of the Pension Credit they are entitled to get to boost their incomes, will now lose the WFP that helps them to pay their fuel bills.

In addition, there are also about a million pensioners whose weekly incomes are less than £50 above the poverty line, who will also be hit hard by the loss of the Payment.

Older people in this group often tell us they really struggle financially; the proposed change will make it even harder for them to afford to stay warm when it gets chilly.

Finally, there is a third group who will find it extremely difficult to heat their homes adequately this winter as a result of the proposed change: older people whose incomes are a little higher though still limited, but who live in energy inefficient homes and/or who are seriously unwell and need to keep the thermostat turned up high in order to protect their health.

It is well established that pensioners tend to do everything possible to avoid going into debt so if they are worried about their future energy bills we know their likely response will be to ration their fuel use and economise by reducing their spending on other essentials.

This proposed policy change is therefore certain to result in more older people experiencing a horrible 'eating or heating' dilemma.

Means-testing WFP this winter, with virtually no notice and no compensatory measures to protect poor and vulnerable pensioners, is the wrong policy decision, and one that will potentially jeopardise their health as well as their finances – the last thing they or the NHS needs.

With winter now just over the horizon, the Government should halt their proposed change to WFP and think again, given the clear evidence of how it will hurt the older people who need it the most.

Visit the Age UK website.

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