Appealing a Universal Credit Decision
How to challenge an incorrect Universal Credit decision through Mandatory Reconsideration and the Social Security Tribunal.
Visión general
Universal Credit decisions can be challenged if the DWP has applied the rules incorrectly, failed to account for your circumstances, or made an error of law. The appeal process involves two stages: first, a Mandatory Reconsideration (MR) by the DWP; then, if the MR is unsuccessful, an appeal to the First-tier Tribunal (Social Entitlement Chamber). Tribunal appeals are free, relatively informal, and have a significant success rate — approximately 65% of Universal Credit appeals succeed.
Proceso paso a paso
Request Mandatory Reconsideration (MR)
You must request an MR before you can appeal to the tribunal. Contact the DWP within 1 month of the decision letter (or 13 months if you have good cause for the delay). You can request an MR by phone (0800 328 5644), by letter, or through your online UC journal. Explain clearly why you think the decision is wrong and provide any additional evidence. The DWP will review the decision and issue an MR Notice (usually within 1 month).
- You can request a 'statement of reasons' if the decision letter does not explain the reasoning
- Gather evidence that supports your position before requesting the MR — medical evidence, payslips, bank statements
- During the MR process, your UC payments continue at the current level (though you will not receive the disputed element)
- Keep a copy of your MR request and note the date it was submitted
Appeal to the First-tier Tribunal
If the MR maintains the original decision, you can appeal to the First-tier Tribunal (Social Entitlement Chamber). File form SSCS1 (available at gov.uk) within 1 month of the MR Notice (or 13 months with good cause). The tribunal appeal is free. In your appeal, explain clearly what the DWP got wrong, the correct interpretation of the rules, and the outcome you seek. Attach the MR Notice and any supporting evidence.
- The 1-month time limit runs from the date on the MR Notice
- You can also appeal online through the HMCTS portal
- Include all supporting documents with your appeal form
- Free advice is available from Citizens Advice, local law centres, and welfare rights organisations
Prepare Your Case
After filing the appeal, HMCTS will send the DWP's 'response' to you (the bundle of documents the DWP is relying on). Review this carefully. Write a short submission explaining: why the DWP's decision is wrong, what the correct position is (citing the relevant regulations if possible — Universal Credit Regulations 2013), and what evidence supports your case. Gather all relevant documents: UC statements, bank statements, fit notes, care plans, etc.
- Seek help from Citizens Advice or a welfare rights adviser — they can assist with submissions and attend the hearing
- The DWP must provide all relevant documentation — if anything is missing, write to the tribunal to request it
- Focus on the relevant regulations: the Welfare Reform Act 2012 and the Universal Credit Regulations 2013
Attend the Tribunal Hearing
Tribunal hearings are informal and are usually heard before a panel of one or three members (a judge and/or specialist members depending on the issue). The judge will want to understand what happened and why you say the decision was wrong. You can bring a representative (including a friend, family member, or Citizens Advice worker). The DWP may or may not attend — if they do not, the tribunal still has full power to make a decision.
- Address the judge as 'Sir' or 'Madam' — tribunals are informal but respect matters
- Bring originals and copies of all your evidence
- Explain your circumstances clearly and in your own words
- A success rate of approximately 65% for UC appeals at tribunal means the odds are often in the appellant's favour
Receive the Decision and Enforce It
The tribunal will either give its decision on the day or issue a written decision shortly afterwards. If you win, the DWP must implement the decision — usually adjusting your UC award and paying any arrears. If you lose, you can request written reasons for the decision and consider whether there are grounds to appeal to the Upper Tribunal on a point of law (you need permission for an Upper Tribunal appeal).
- Request written reasons for the decision within 28 days if they are not given automatically
- An Upper Tribunal appeal is only available on a point of law — factual disputes cannot be re-litigated
- If the DWP does not implement a tribunal decision, contact them immediately in writing and escalate to your MP if necessary
Costes
Advertencias importantes
You must request a Mandatory Reconsideration before you can appeal to the tribunal — the tribunal will not accept an appeal without an MR Notice.
The 1-month time limit for requesting an MR and filing a tribunal appeal is strictly applied — act promptly.
Appealing a UC decision does not automatically restore the disputed amount while the appeal is pending — you may need to apply for advance payments or hardship payments in the meantime.