IRRV Alert - week ending 5th August 2016

News

Publicity

DWP Stats on Benefit cap up to and including May 2016

 

 

 

 

 

Official Statistics

Benefit cap: number of households capped to May 2016

 

From:

Department for Work and Pensions

First published:

4 August 2016

Part of:

Benefit cap statistics

Statistics on households that have had their benefits capped between 15 April 2013 and May 2016.

Documents

Benefit cap quarterly statistics: GB households capped to May 2016

PDF, 268KB, 9 pages

This file may not be suitable for users of assistive technology. Request an accessible format.

If you use assistive technology (eg a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email accessible.formats@dwp.gsi.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

Tables: Benefit cap quarterly statistics: GB households capped to May 2016

ODS, 191KB

This file is in an OpenDocument format

This file may not be suitable for users of assistive technology. Request an accessible format.

If you use assistive technology (eg a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email accessible.formats@dwp.gsi.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

Detail

The report and data tables on this page include data on:

  • cumulative number of households capped
  • point-in-time number of households capped at each month since the cap was introduced
  • number of households that were previously capped but have moved off the cap

Find further breakdowns of benefit cap statistics in Stat-Xplore, our online tool for exploring some of DWP’s main statistics. Use Stat-Xplore to create your own tables and charts.

Read our Benefit cap statistics: background information and methodology publication.

The government introduced a cap on the total amount of benefit that working-age households can get so that, broadly, households on out-of-work benefits will no longer get more in welfare payments than the average weekly wage for working households.


IRRV Software

Copyright © 2025 · All Rights Reserved · Institute of Revenues Rating and Valuation
Warning: Undefined array key "User_id" in /home/irrvnet/public_html/forumalert/inc_footer.php on line 4