CliffNotes
- Winter fuel payments reversed and threshold raised
- Pensioners earning up to £35,000 a year will now be included – that’s around 7.5 million people who had been excluded
- It’ll add £1.25 billion to the Treasury’s bill and is expected to feature prominently in the spending review
Winter fuel payments reversed and threshold raised
What happened
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has reversed the winter fuel payment cut, confirming full payments of £200–£300 this winter for pensioners earning up to £35,000 a year in England and Wales. The move reinstates support for about 7.5 million people who were initially excluded when the benefit was made conditional on pension credit. Payments will be automatically issued in November, with those over the income threshold expected to repay via the tax system.
What next
The change adds an estimated £1.25 billion to the Treasury’s annual bill and is expected to feature prominently in the 11 June spending review. Critics predict either higher taxes or cuts elsewhere to balance the books. While Labour hopes to neutralise political fallout, a tight implementation timeline and technical complexities around repayment could spark confusion.
MSPs and MPs are likely to seek urgent clarification on how the roll‑out will work—and whether pensioner families who’ve already lost the payment will receive back pay.