UK Government Considers Scrapping Two-Child Benefit Cap Amid Cost Concerns

he UK’s Education Secretary, Bridget Phillipson, has confirmed that the government is actively reviewing the controversial two-child benefit cap; a policy that currently restricts child-related welfare support to the first two children in most low-income families.
Speaking recently, Phillipson acknowledged that lifting the cap could significantly help struggling families but warned that the move would come with a hefty price tag, estimated at around £3.5 billion per year.
The cap, introduced in 2017, has faced widespread criticism for pushing more children into poverty. Critics argue that it hasn’t achieved its intended goal of encouraging smaller families but has instead deepened hardship for many households.
Phillipson revealed that the issue is being examined by the Child Poverty Taskforce, which she co-chairs with Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall. Their findings will feed into a broader child poverty strategy expected this autumn.
Pressure is also mounting politically, with Reform UK—led by Nigel Farage—vowing to abolish the policy. This, alongside growing internal support within Labour, adds urgency to the ongoing review.
While no final decision has been made, the government’s willingness to reconsider the cap signals a potential shift in welfare policy aimed at tackling child poverty across the UK.
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