The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has underpaid around 237,000 people a total of £1.46 billion, according to a new report.
Analysis from the National Audit Office (NAO) said this was an increase of £429 million and some 105,000 people on the DWP’s best estimate at the end of April 2021. The report, by Comptroller and Auditor General of the NAO, Gareth Davies, highlights that some underpayments go back as far as 1985.
It also reveals that the DWP has “identified several new groups of pensioners potentially affected by underpayment", the most significant relating to Home Responsibilities Protection (HRP). HRP was a scheme to help protect parents’ and carers’ State Pension credits while they stayed home to look after children and was replaced by National Insurance credits in 2010. However, these were not recorded accurately on National Insurance records.
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The report said DWP is working with HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) to understand more about the scale, potential causes and options to correct these cases. These newly identified errors account for most of the increase in the State Pension underpayment rate from 0.3% to 0.5%, the Daily Record reports.
People may still be able to apply for HRP for full tax years (April to April) between 1978 and 2010. You can find out more about this here.
The NAO also said the increase in the number of underpayments is because the DWP has now undertaken new computerised scans of its data, which it was unable to conduct last year, to identify cases its staff need to review.
DWP has now conducted all the scans it needs to identify potentially affected cases but will not know the full extent of the underpayments until it has fully reviewed every case. The DWP estimates the outstanding liability, after payments made up to March 31 of this year, at £1.35bn.
DWP aims to complete its review of State Pension underpayments by the end of 2023, but recently told the Work and Pensions Committee that it expects to complete the exercise for people over the age of 80, the most vulnerable and those on category BL, by spring next year.
DWP also plans to ramp up recruitment from 500 people reviewing cases to 1,500 to complete the review by the end of December 2023. However, the NAO said that on current assessments, review and correction of all widowed pensioner cases may take until late 2024.
It said: "A delay of this length would increase the total amount underpaid to pensioners by an estimated £14m."
Who may be due back payments for State Pension?
There are six particular groups strongly encouraged to contact the pension service to see if they could be entitled to more State Pension.
- Married women whose husbands turned 65 before March 17, 2008 and who have never claimed an uplift to the 60% rate
- Widows whose pension was not increased when their husbands died
- Widows whose pension is now correct but who think they may have been underpaid while their late husband was still alive, particularly if he reached the age of 65 after March 17, 2008
- Over-80s who are receiving a basic State Pension of less than £80.45
- Widowers and heirs of married women where the woman has now died but was underpaid state pension during her lifetime
- Divorced women , particularly those who divorced after retirement, to check that they are benefiting from the contributions of their ex-husband
You can check if you are affected, or eligible to make a claim, here.
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