The government is cutting benefit payments to some of Britain’s poorest families or threatening them with debt collectors in a raid that is “plunging people into poverty”.
More than a million people have had their universal credit payments cut over the past year because they were overpaid tax credits in the past by HMRC.
Some of these debts are decades-old and in many cases the claimant was not at fault for the overpayment or aware that the debtexisted.
Campaigners and MPs called on the government to immediately pause the deductions, an approach that they warned was causing widespread destitution at a time when people are already struggling with the cost-of-living crisis.
Millions docked because of historical overpayments
Official figures obtained by Sky News show that last year 1.3 million universal credit claimants had payments docked because of historical tax credit overpayments.
It’s a figure that’s been on the rise.
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In total, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) deducted £372.576m from claimants on HMRC’s behalf.
Tax credits were introduced in 1999 by the then Labour government to encourage people into work by offering support payments to parents and those on low incomes.
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The system is being phased out and people on tax credits will all have moved to Universal Credit by the end of next year.
In 2014 the Treasury agreed with the DWP that, as previous tax credit claimants moved onto Universal Credit, their old tax credit debts would be transferred and collected under the new system.
Blaming claimants for HMRC errors
While HMRC maintains that many of these erroneous payments are down to fraud or errors made by the claimant, a significant number are attributable to errors made by officials.
Charities warned that in some cases HMRC was blaming claimants for errors of its own making.
Michelle Welch from Bromley, south London, is one such case. She was facing deductions of £20 a month to recover an eight-year-old debt of £2,379.26.
The mother of three, who now works part-time at a British Heart Foundation charity shop, was hospitalised in October 2015 after suffering a mental health crisis.
Although a support officer telephoned HMRC to explain that she was no longer caring for her three children, HMRC did not stop the payments and the money continued being paid into a bank account that her partner was accessing to support her children.
After multiple attempts to notify the agency, the payments eventually stopped on 28 January 2016.
Years later, in August 2021, HMRC wrote to Ms Welch demanding that she repay the money the agency overpaid in the interim. They claimed she failed to notify them of her change in circumstances in time and her universal credit was docked as a result.
Ms Welch’s multiple appeals were rejected.
“I’m just living day by day. I can’t save. I can’t go out… I could put that extra money on gas and electric,” she said.
“I just feel like I’m not getting anywhere. I’m not getting anywhere fast.”
After Sky News intervened, HMRC agreed that Ms Welch was not at fault and has now cancelled the debt.
“We apologise to Ms Welch for the inconvenience and upset caused by our mistake,” HMRC said. “We’ve acted to correct her payments and a redress payment will be made.”
Ms Welch said her dealings with HMRC and DWP had left her feeling dejected, ignored and stuck in what was a difficult time in her life.
“It’s hard for a mother to give up one child let alone three because they’re mentally unwell. It wasn’t an easy thing to do. [It takes me back to] a place I would never want to be in again. It makes me feel ashamed and terrible.
“I busy myself so that I don’t have to think back to what I went through and what my children went through. It’s something I should talk to a psychiatrist about, not people I don’t know [at HMRC and DWP].”
Not an isolated case
Sky News spoke to dozens of claimants who said they were paying back debts they do not believe, or did not realise, they owed.
Many struggled to get a clear breakdown or explanation from HMRC when they challenged the demands for payment.
Vicky Timlin, from Cheltenham, ended a tax credit claim in September 2021 after moving in with a partner.
She was then told to repay back £909.29 that had been overpaid to her. When she sought an explanation, an HMRC representative told her that the overpayment could only be explained by a “computer glitch” but she would have to repay it regardless.
Ms Timlin is not claiming Universal Credit so her payments have not been docked.
However, HMRC has warned her that the debt will be recouped through any future universal credit claim. Her debt has now been passed onto a private debt collection agency and she is on a payment plan for the next seven years.
Sky News understands that 29,000 cases are now being handled by private debt collection agencies.
“I felt completely helpless. I got off the phone and I was in absolute floods of tears because I just felt like this is so unfair.
“Why have I got to pay this money because of a computer glitch and there was literally nothing that I can do about it and they didn’t seem to care at all,” she said.
“They shouldn’t be doing it to people. They need to be able to explain to people properly why they owe this money and not give them different excuses every time.”
HMRC accepted that Vicky did nothing wrong and apologised for its failure to clearly explain the debt to Ms Timlin.
It maintained that she had been overpaid because previous re-calculations of her entitlement had triggered the system to generate duplicate payments.
It said this was a feature of the system and that these overpayments would have balanced out across the remainder of the financial year had she continued with the claim.
“To ensure customers receive regular payments of a similar amount, tax credits awards are calculated across the 12-month financial year,” HMRC said.
“Customers are required to tell us of any change in circumstances and when they do, awards are recalculated and balanced across the remainder of the period. This means when a claim ceases during the financial year, in some instances an overpayment may be due.”
Official errors disguised
Official reports published by HMRC suggest that errors on the part of officials make up a very small proportion of overpayments, compared to fraud and errors on the part of claimants.
However, charities pointed out that in many cases officials were contributing to errors by providing poor advice on the phone. In the case of Ms Welch, official error was disguised as a claimant error.
Campaigners say the system is causing widespread distress at a time when the cost-of-living crisis is already driving families into poverty.
Food bank visitors in debt to the government
The Trussell Trust, which oversees a network of more than 1,300 food banks across the UK, has said the vast majority of its visitors were in debt to the government.
MPs from across the political spectrum have urged the government to pause collections while the cost-of-living crisis is still raging.
Stephen Timms, MP for East Ham and chair of the work and pensions select committee, said: “People are completely unaware of these debts when suddenly money starts getting taken out of their Universal Credit monthly payments and, in a cost-of-living crisis with inflation running at current levels, that’s causing real hardship for people.
“So my select a committee, which is an all-party committee with a Conservative majority, recommended that the government should pause these deductions while inflation is running at its current level.
“Unfortunately, the government rejected that recommendation, but I think that would be very helpful just to support people through this really, really difficult time.”
Nigel Farage has told Sky News he “can’t be pushed or bullied” by anybody after Elon Musk said the Reform MP “doesn’t have what it takes” to lead his party.
In an interview with Sky’s political correspondent Ali Fortescue, Mr Farage said he has spoken with the billionaire owner of X since his criticism on 5 January, when Mr Musk said: “The Reform Party needs a new leader. Farage doesn’t have what it takes.”
Asked if the pair are still friends, Mr Farage said: “Of course we’re friends. He just says what he thinks at any moment in time.”
He added he has “been in touch” with Mr Musk, though wouldn’t divulge what they had discussed.
“Look, he said lots of supportive things. He said one thing that wasn’t supportive. I mean, that’s just the way it is,” Mr Farage said.
Asked if he was afraid to criticise the tech mogul, the Clacton MP said the situation was “the opposite”, and he openly disagreed with Mr Musk on his views on far-right activist Tommy Robinson.
Mr Farage said: “What he [Musk] was saying online was that effectively Tommy Robinson was a political prisoner and I wouldn’t go along with that.
“If I had gone along with that, he wouldn’t have put out a tweet that was against me.
“By the way, you know, I can’t be pushed or bullied or made to change by anybody.
“I stick to what I believe.”
Mr Musk has endorsed Robinsonand claimed he was “telling the truth” about grooming gangs, writing on X: “Free Tommy Robinson”.
But Mr Farage said that Robinson, who is serving an 18-month jail term for contempt of court, isn’t welcome in Reform UK and neither are his supporters.
He said: “If people within Reform think Tommy Robinson should be a member of Reform and play a central role in Reform, that disagreement is absolutely fundamental.
“I’ve never wanted to work with people who were active in the BNP. I’ve made that clear right throughout the last decade of my on/off political career. So that’s what the point of difference is.”
Despite their disagreement, Mr Farage said he is confident Mr Musk will continue to support Reform and “may well” still give money to it.
Mr Farage was speaking from Reform’s South East of England Conference, one of a series of regional events aimed at building up the party’s support base.
This would apply when councils seek permission to reorganise, so that smaller district authorities merge with other nearby ones to give them more sway over their area.
Mr Farage, who is hoping to make gains in the spring contests, claimed the plans are not about devolution but about “elections being cancelled”.
“I thought only dictators cancelled elections. This is unbelievable and devolution or a change to local government structures is being used as an excuse,” he said.
He claimed Tory-controlled councils are “grabbing it like it’s a life belt”, because they fear losing seats to Reform.
“It’s an absolute denial of democracy,” he added.
Mr Farage was also asked why many Reform members don’t like to speak on camera about why they support his party.
He said he did not accept there was a toxicity associated with Reform and claimed there was “institutional bias against anybody that isn’t left of centre”.
Specialist search teams, police dogs and divers have been dispatched to find two sisters who vanished in Aberdeen three days ago.
Eliza and Henrietta Huszti, both 32, were last seen on CCTV in the city’s Market Street at Victoria Bridge at about 2.12am on Tuesday.
The siblings were captured crossing the bridge and turning right onto a footpath next to the River Dee in the direction of Aberdeen Boat Club.
Police Scotland has launched a major search and said it is carrying out “extensive inquires” in an effort to find the women.
Chief Inspector Darren Bruce said: “Local officers, led by specialist search advisors, are being assisted by resources including police dogs and our marine unit.”
Aberdeenshire Drone Services told Sky News it has offered to help in the search and is waiting to hear back from Police Scotland.
The sisters, from Aberdeen city centre, are described as slim with long brown hair.
Police said the Torry side of Victoria Bridge where the sisters were last seen contains many commercial and industrial units, with searches taking place in the vicinity.
The force urged businesses in and around the South Esplanade and Menzies Road area to review CCTV footage recorded in the early hours of Tuesday in case it captured anything of significance.
Drivers with relevant dashcam footage are also urged to come forward.
CI Bruce added: “We are continuing to speak to people who know Eliza and Henrietta and we urge anyone who has seen them or who has any information regarding their whereabouts to please contact 101.”
Britain’s gas storage levels are “concerningly low” with less than a week of demand in store, the operator of the country’s largest gas storage site said on Friday.
Plunging temperatures and high demand for gas-fired power stations are the main factors behind the low levels, Centrica said.
The UK is heavily reliant on gas for its home heating and also uses a significant amount for electricity generation.
As of the 9th of January 2025, UK storage sites are 26% lower than last year’s inventory at the same time, leaving them around half full,” Centrica said.
“This means the UK has less than a week of gas demand in store.”
The firm’s Rough gas storage site, a depleted field off England’s east coast, makes up around half of the country’s gas storage capacity.