The DWP is currently pursuing unpaid carers for a staggering quarter of a billion pounds in overpaid Carers Allowance (CA), even as a review begins into how the system has gone so badly wrong.

A report by the National Audit Office (NAO) has found that CA overpayment debt rose to £251.7 million in 2023-24, increasing from £150.2 million in 2018-19.

The number of carers being owing money to the DWP increased every year from 2018-19 to 2023-24 – rising from 80,169 to 136,730, an increase of 71%.

The DWP recovered £28 million more in overpayments, but also wrote off £6 million more, in 2023-24 than it did in 2018-19.

The NAO found that in 2023-24, the most significant causes of new overpayment cases related to:

  • claimants having earnings over the permitted limit (58% of cases).
  • claimants ceasing to provide care (24% of cases).
  • other reasons where the claimant no longer met the eligibility criteria, e.g. being in receipt of an overlapping benefit; the person being cared for had died (16% of cases).

The government announced in October that that a review of Carer’s Allowance would take place.

The terms of reference of the review have now been published.  It will look at:

  • How overpayments of Carer’s Allowance linked to earnings accrued and why this has happened
  • What changes can be made to reduce the risk of such overpayments accruing in future
  • What DWP can best do to support those who have already accrued overpayments

The review is due to report next summer. 

In the meantime, the DWP will continue pursuing carers for debts they can ill afford to repay.

Read the full NAO report here

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    · 4 days ago
    I'm confused by the title of this article which describes how unpaid carers are being pursued for over payments of Carers Allowance. How can anyone claim to be an unpaid carer if they claim (CA)? For those of us that are truly unpaid carers and who do not claim this benefit I find it quite upsetting, even worrying when I read such articles. I think the meaning 'unpaid carer' needs to be explained a little better so as not to confuse the two.
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      · 2 days ago
      @Leon Carter Ah! I see “By using the term (UNPAID CARER) the DWP believes that this absolves them from meeting workers rights.” In my opinion this constitutes  abuse of a workers rights. We are all working hard caring for people that we love.Many of us don’t have a choice, we are forced into caring roles. It’s not an easy job.Carers are often caring through out the day and night.We are saving the country a fortune in Care Home and Social Care fees. So why are we being devalued and punished. Especially in these hard times. Regardless of the terminologies used the DWP can’t deny that Carers are WORKERS.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Leon Carter I am an unpaid Carer for my wife.                      
      2: We should receive at least the minimum wage, since we must commit to caring for 35hrs to receive the allowance.
       For those hours we are paid a pittance. 
      We are further restricted as to how much we can earn from secular work. 
      Many of us are caring 24/7 for our loved ones. Instead of rewarding us fairly, we are forced to live in poverty caused by unfair restrictions.
      Today I heard that our Prime Minister has plans to appoint 30 highly paid Peers to the House of Commons. When he told the electorate that he was going to reduce the amount of Peerages in the House of Commons. We have been well and truly shafted!

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @Chris S. Unpaid carer means they are not employed by a caring company.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 days ago
    How can this save money in the long run? If unpaid carers are not available then surely they would be replaced by paid carers or social services from the council. I am not sure I quite understand the logic of this haggle over the pennies and trip over the pounds!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @J When a paid Carer becomes a Pensioner they are no longer entitled to claim Carers Allowance. They are told not to worry you will now be classed as an unpaid Carer. That’s all I was told when I phoned the DWP.I have no clue what that means for me, or others. But now I am worried. How can an unpaid Carer have to pay back what they never received?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @J This unpaid carer malarky seems so unfair! I'm looking after my mum who is 87 and severely disabled and spend on  average 20-25 hours providing support throughout the week, this includes social visits every other day, trips to doctors/hospital, shopping plus on my days at home I'm doing several more hours on phone chats and support with technical issues when she's messed up the TV. My mum has mild cognitive decline but refuses a memory assessment for dementia, I get paid nothing for this help thanks to the strict Carers Allowance rules.

      What makes this doubly unfair is that I'm in the Support Group of ESA myself due to a variety of health conditions and yet I'm the only family member nearby that can help, people in my situation, and there are many, SHOULD receive extra financial assistance. If I flatly refused to provide my mum with support she would end up in a home costing the government thousands! Even if I did get better and wanted to return to work I couldn't because my mum won't accept help from other organizations due to past bad experiences with carers.

      The system sucks!

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