Latest PIP statistics show that as of April 30, 2026, there were four million claimants entitled to Personal Independence Payment in England and Wales
Four million people across the UK are now receiving Personal Independence Payment (PIP), according to fresh figures released this week.
Experts are now warning that while it remains “essential for many people”, Britain must be “honest about cost, fraud risk, assessment quality and long-term affordability”. The latest PIP statistics reveal that as of April 30, 2026, four million claimants were entitled to PIP in England and Wales, marking a 2% rise compared to January 31, 2026.
Among these recipients, 3.3 million (83%) were of working age while 680,000 (17%) had reached State Pension age. Some 37% received the highest level of award, unchanged from January 2026.
Experts cautioned that, although PIP proves vital for many, the escalating benefits expenditure will ultimately result in increased taxation, greater borrowing or reduced public spending in other areas.
Kate Underwood, founder and chief people strategist at Southampton-based Kate Underwood HR and Training, emphasised PIP’s significance for countless people.
She added: “Four million people on PIP, I get why this will have many shocked. But before everyone clutches their pearls, let’s be clear what PIP actually is. It is not an out-of-work freebie. Plenty of the people claiming it are sitting at their desks in small businesses right now, smashing it, precisely because PIP helps with the extra costs of a health condition.
“For a small employer, that’s gold. PIP is often the only reason a brilliant, loyal team member is still in their seat and not signed off for good. And finding their replacement in this market? Best of luck. Is the bill sustainable? Fair question. But you don’t fix it by snatching support from people grafting their socks off in a job.
“You fix it by sorting the mess that makes them need help, like NHS waiting lists and workplace adjustments that need reform. Slash PIP without thinking and you won’t save a penny. You’ll just lob the bill straight at employers and the NHS.”
Financial adviser Martin Rayner of Compton Financial Services warned that the UK’s debt burden continues to grow.
He added: “PIP is essential for many people, but the cost is rising year after year and there is little sign of that trend slowing. At the same time, the UK continues to spend more than it brings in, with national debt still climbing. If a client came to me with spending that consistently exceeded their income and debt that kept rising, I would tell them the situation was unsustainable.
“The Government should be judged by the same standard. For those genuinely in need, support should absolutely be there. The real debate is where the line is drawn, because every extra pound spent comes with a trade-off. The choices are always the same: higher taxes, more borrowing or less spending elsewhere.
“The longer this is left unaddressed, the harder it becomes to fix. Rising debt means rising interest costs, which leaves less money available for everything else. Someone always pays the bill, whether through higher taxes, reduced public services or the burden being passed to future generations.”
Nouran Moustafa, practice principal and IFA at Roxton Wealth, said the UK needed to be honest about the cost of having four million people on PIP.
She added: “The figures show two things can be true at the same time. PIP is essential for many people who genuinely need support with the extra costs of living with a disability or long-term health condition. It is not a luxury payment; for many, it is the difference between independence and financial distress.
“But the pace of growth cannot just be brushed aside. Four million claimants is a serious number, and any government has to ask whether the system is targeted properly, assessed fairly and financially sustainable. The answer is not to attack disabled people. The answer is to build a system that protects genuine claimants while being honest about cost, fraud risk, assessment quality and long-term affordability.
“If the UK wants a welfare system people still trust in ten years, it needs both compassion and control. One without the other will fail. Too much control becomes cruelty. Too much spending without discipline becomes unsustainable.”

