If you have an Income Support overpayment you must pay back, you should deal with it as soon as possible.
While having to pay back money can be worrying, there are lots of ways to pay the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) – including in instalments.
If it will be difficult for you to pay this way, call the DWP debt management centre and ask to change how you pay. You should also call if you can’t find your overpayment letter.
If you have other debts
You should check you’re dealing with the most urgent debts first. Use our get help with your debts tool to work out if you should prioritise other debts before your Income Support overpayment.How you’ll be asked to pay the DWP
When the DWP wrote to tell you you’ve been overpaid, they’ll have said how they want you to pay the money back.Coronavirus – if your repayments for a benefit overpayment were temporarily stopped
Your repayments will start again after the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) temporarily stopped them because of coronavirus. The DWP will write to you to tell you when your repayments will automatically restart if:- you make repayments by Direct Debit
- your repayments are taken from your benefits or earnings
DWP debt management contact centre
Telephone: 0800 916 0647
Textphone: 0800 916 0651
Relay UK – if you can’t hear or speak on the phone, you can type what you want to say: 18001 then 0800 328 1344
You can use Relay UK with an app or a textphone. There’s no extra charge to use it. Find out how to use Relay UK on the Relay UK website.
Video relay – if you use British Sign Language (BSL).
You can find out how to use video relay on YouTube.
Calling from abroad: +44 (0)161 904 1233
Monday to Friday, 8am to 7.30pm
Saturday, 9am to 4pm
Calls are free from mobiles and landlines.
DWP debt management contact centre
Telephone: 0800 916 0647
Textphone: 0800 916 0651
Relay UK – if you can’t hear or speak on the phone, you can type what you want to say: 18001 then 0800 328 1344
You can use Relay UK with an app or a textphone. There’s no extra charge to use it. Find out how to use Relay UK on the Relay UK website.
Video relay – if you use British Sign Language (BSL).
You can find out how to use video relay on YouTube.
Calling from abroad: +44 (0)161 904 1233
Monday to Friday, 8am to 7.30pm
Saturday, 9am to 4pm
Calls are free from mobiles and landlines.
It’s important to make a note of the date and time you call. Also write down the name of the person you spoke to. You might need these details if something goes wrong and your repayments aren’t changed.
Paying from your Income Support
The DWP will usually ask you to pay them back through your Income Support payments. You can call the DWP debt management centre if you want to pay another way, for example by paying them directly through your wages.
The maximum they’ll usually take off your weekly Income Support payment is £11.10. The DWP can increase this amount by half of any:
- weekly earnings disregard you get
- benefit you get subject to a £10 disregard
- charitable income subject to a disregard
Using other benefits to pay
You can pay back the DWP through another benefit if you don’t get Income Support any more.
You’ll usually need to pay a third of your weekly benefit payment to the DWP. If this amount won’t leave you enough to pay for essentials like food or heating, call the DWP debt management contact centre. Ask for a smaller amount to be taken each week.
Call the DWP debt management contact centre and tell them which benefit you would like the money to be taken from. The only benefits you can’t use to pay the DWP are:
- Child Benefit
- Housing Benefit
- Guardian’s Allowance
Paying from your wages
If you work for a company with 10 or more employees, the DWP can take money from your wages for the overpayment – they don’t need to ask your permission. Your employer will pay the DWP and take that amount from your weekly or monthly wages.
If the DWP has said they want you to pay a different way, you can ask to pay from your wages by calling the DWP debt management contact centre.
You’ll be sent a letter from the DWP confirming how much can be taken from your wages. Your employer should also write to confirm how much is being taken no later than the day you’re paid your reduced wage.
The maximum amount your employer can give the DWP is 20% of your wages – and this is only if you’re paid £2,240.01 or over a month after tax. This increases to 40% if you were overpaid because you deliberately gave the wrong information, known as ‘fraud’.
You must tell the DWP if you leave your job and where your new job is, if you have one.
Paying the DWP directly
If you don’t get any other benefits and the DWP isn’t taking money from your wages, you can pay them directly.
Usually the DWP will ask you to pay the overpayment in one go, but you can call the DWP debt management contact centre and ask to pay in instalments.
See the different ways you can pay the DWP directly on GOV.UK, for example through online banking.
If you’re challenging the overpayment
The DWP shouldn’t take any money from you until your mandatory reconsideration or appeal has been decided. If they do, you can make a complaint. The DWP will give back any money they’ve taken if your challenge is successful.If your Income Support is paid to your mortgage lender
The DWP will ask them to pay back the mortgage interest overpayment if it was because:- you stopped being entitled to Income Support
- the DWP didn’t reduce your mortgage interest payments when the interest rate was lowered
- the DWP didn’t reduce your mortgage interest payments when some of your mortgage was paid off