If you’ve been overpaid benefits, you’ll probably have to repay this money. Find out why you might have been overpaid, how you can make repayments, how to query them and what to do if you can’t afford to make them.
What’s in this guide
- If you think you’ve been overpaid
- Why you might have been overpaid
- Overpayments of tax credits
- Will you have to pay back an overpayment?
- How much are the repayments?
- How to challenge an overpayment decision
- What other payments have to be paid back?
- Repaying a benefit debt
- Can’t afford the repayments?
If you think you’ve been overpaid
If you think you’ve been overpaid benefits, it’s important to report it as soon as possible. The longer you leave it, the more money you may have to pay back.
Universal Credit
Report changes or contact the Universal Credit helpline if you think you've been overpaid (in England, Scotland and Wales).
Phone: 0800 328 5644Opens in a new window
Relay UK (formerly Textphone): 18001Opens in a new window then 0800 328 1344Opens in a new window
8am to 6pm, Monday to Friday.
Or log into your online accountOpens in a new window on GOV.UK and add a note to your journal.
If you’re in Northern Ireland
Phone: 0800 012 1331Opens in a new window
Relay UK (formerly Textphone): 18001Opens in a new window then: 0800 012 1441Opens in a new window
9am to 4pm, Monday to Friday.
Housing Benefit or Council Tax Reduction
Report an overpayment of Housing Benefit or Council Tax Reduction to your local authority.
Other benefits
Contact the office paying your benefit as soon as possible and let them know if you think you’ve been overpaid.
Why you might have been overpaid
The overpayment might have happened because of:
- a mistake by the DWP when your benefits were worked out
- wrong information, or not enough information, when you made your claim
- a change of circumstances.
Overpayments of tax credits
Although tax credits ended in April 2025, old debts can still be recovered by HMRC, going back up to 6 years. For example, there may be a dispute between you and an ex as to who is responsible, or who was at fault for the overpayment.
To understand how old debts can still be recoveredOpens in a new window visit the Low Incomes Tax Reform Group website.
Will you have to pay back an overpayment?
Depending on the benefit, there are different rules around paying back an overpayment.
Universal Credit, new style Jobseeker’s Allowance or new style Employment and Support Allowance
It doesn't matter whether the overpayment was your fault or due to an error by the DWP, in both cases you will usually be asked to pay it back.
If the overpayment wasn’t your fault, for example an administrative error, you’ll usually be asked to pay it back as well.
However, if you think the amount you received is correct you do have the right to argue that you haven’t been overpaid and challenge the decision. See our section on ‘How to challenge an overpayment decision’.
In a small number of cases each year, the DWP can agree to let you not have to pay it back if you are undergoing hardship.
Housing Benefit
You will normally have to pay back a Housing Benefit overpayment even if it wasn’t your fault, and you couldn’t have been expected to know that you were being overpaid.
Find out more about what happens if the council says you've had a Housing Benefit overpaymentOpens in a new window on the Citizens advice website.
Your council has the power to write-off the overpayment if the mistake was clearly theirs or repayment would cause you extreme hardship.
Find out more about paying back a Housing Benefit overpaymentOpens in a new window on the Citizens Advice website.
Council Tax Reduction
Overpayments of Council Tax Reduction are treated as Council Tax Arrears. The rules for how they need to be repaid vary depending on where you live.
Find out more about Council Tax Reduction overpaymentsOpens in a new window at Turn2us.
Other benefits
For all other benefits, you’ll have to pay back the overpayment if you gave the wrong, or incomplete, information when you made your claim, even accidentally.
However, where the overpayment is due to a DWP mistake, that is called an ‘official error’ and the DWP can't demand repayment.
You also have the right to argue that you haven’t been overpaid and challenge the decision. See our section on ‘How to challenge an overpayment decision’.
How much are the repayments?
You’ll get a letter – or a message in your online account – about your overpayment. This will explain how much you were overpaid and for how long.
If you're repaying the amount you owe by taking the money out of current benefits, the way your repayments are worked out is different depending on which benefit has been overpaid:
- For Universal Credit, it can’t be more than 15% of your standard allowance.
- For Housing Benefit – if it’s paid to you, the repayments are usually £14.40 a week (2026/27). If it’s paid direct to your landlord, they usually have to pay it all back in one go and you’ll have to agree a repayment plan with your landlord.
- For other benefits, such as Pension Credit, the repayments are usually £14.40 a week (2026/27).
Penalties
If the overpayment is your fault, or you didn’t try to correct a mistake, you might be charged a penalty of £50 on top of the money you have to pay back.
You can appeal against a decision to charge you a penalty.
How to challenge an overpayment decision
You can ask for the decision to be looked at again and appeal against it, if:
- you don’t agree that you’ve been overpaid
- you don’t agree with the amount
- you don’t think you should have been charged a penalty.
Find out how to challenge a benefits decisionOpens in a new window on the Citizens Advice website.
What other payments have to be paid back?
Universal Credit advance payments
You might have received an advance payment while you were waiting for your first Universal Credit payment to come through.
Your repayments will probably start from your first full Universal Credit payment, although they can be delayed up to three months if you’re in financial crisis.
You can make the repayments over a maximum of 24 months. And they can be up to 15% of your Universal Credit basic allowance. This is called the Fair Repayment Rate.
Universal Credit Budgeting Advances
You might have had a Budgeting Advance to help with emergency household costs or to pay towards a funeral.
Your repayments will have started straight away after receiving the advance. They are taken out of your Universal Credit payments.
They are usually spread over 12 months, but this can be extended by an extra three months if needed.
Budgeting Loans from the Social Fund
You might have received a Budgeting Loan to help pay for a household appliance or to help with the cost of moving home.
Repayments usually spread over two years and are taken automatically from your benefits. The repayment amount is based on your income and what you can afford.
Hardship Payments if you’re on Universal Credit
You might have had a Hardship Payment to help make ends meet if your benefit payments were reduced because of a sanction.
You only have to repay a Hardship Payment if you’re on Universal Credit (not other benefits). They’re repaid out of your future payments and they can be up to 30% of your Universal Credit basic allowance.
Repaying a benefit debt
Before repaying a benefit debt, speak to a free debt adviser to make sure you can afford the repayments. Use our Debt adviser locator tool to find free and confidential debt advice online, over the phone or near to where you live.
Benefit debt repayments can be made by:
- deductions from your benefit payments
- making payments through online banking, Direct Debit or standing order.
If none of these are possible, the debt can be recovered from your wages or passed onto a debt collection agency.
Can’t afford the repayments?
If you’re struggling, or worried you might, speak to a free debt adviser.
A debt adviser can give free and confidential debt advice online, over the phone or near to where you live. They will:
- treat everything you say in confidence
- never judge you or make you feel bad about your situation
- suggest ways of dealing with debts that you might not know about
- check you’ve applied for all the benefits and entitlements available to you.
If this is your only debt
If you don’t have enough to live on because of the repayments you’re being asked to make, you can ask for them to be reduced.
If you’re repaying a Universal Credit advance payment, call the Universal Credit Helpline or log into your online account and add a note to your journal asking for your repayments to be reduced.
If you have other debts
Debts such as rent arrears, overdue energy bills, and unpaid Council Tax are called priority debts. This means the consequences of not paying them off are more serious.
If you’ve got more than one priority debt, it’s important to get advice as soon as possible.
Our Bill prioritiser also helps to sort out which ones you need to deal with first.