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New FOI reveals over 1,800 people could be sitting on a ‘pensions goldmine’ which will go unclaimed unless they reply to DWP letters – Steve Webb

Pensions & benefits Financial wellbeing Personal finance
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A new FOI reply received by LCP Partner Steve Webb has revealed that at the end of July 2024, 1,859 people who had received letters from DWP telling them about potential underpayments of state pension to their late parents or late spouse had not responded. Unless DWP receives a reply to these letters, the underpayment will remain unclaimed.

The vast majority of these cases relate to cases where the person who died was a widow (or widower), and DWP now believes they may have been underpaid state pension. There are 1,671 letters to next of kin flagging potential underpayments of this sort to which DWP has yet to receive a reply. A further 131 relate to cases where a married woman’s low pension was not automatically increased when her husband retired, and 57 cases relate to underpaid pensions to the over 80s.

DWP say that they only work out the amount potentially owed when they receive a reply to the letter, but in the past underpayments have ranged from a few pounds to over £100,000.

These letters arrive ‘out of the blue’ and people may not realise the importance of responding. If DWP cannot trace a next of kin then any underpaid monies will be retained by the Government.

Now Steve Webb is calling on people to check if they have received a letter and to act if they have put off responding. He said:

“We know that well over 100,000 people were underpaid state pensions and DWP has spent more than three years trying to track them down. In thousands of cases, the person who was underpaid is sadly no longer with us, but their heirs should still benefit from any underpayment. Although not all underpayments are large, in some cases, people have received £100,000 or more, so the recipients of these letters could be sitting on a pensions goldmine. If you have received a letter from DWP about a potential underpayment to a loved one, I would urge you to respond as soon as possible.”

The latest update on the correction exercise is in the DWP Annual Report published in July 2024. This shows that by March 2024, DWP had paid out £594m in pension arrears to 99,558 people.

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