Published: 25 November 2025. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
Hundreds of thousands of unpaid carers across the UK are set to have their cases reassessed after an official review found they had been left with substantial debts due to government errors and maladministration. The announcement follows a year-long Guardian investigation that revealed carers had faced penalties of up to £20,000, with some plunged into financial hardship and others even facing prosecution.
The review, due to be published on Tuesday, concluded that many of the overpayments were not deliberate attempts to break the law but the result of confusing guidance and administrative failures within the Department for Work and Pensions. Ministers have promised to cancel or reduce incorrectly issued penalties but have stopped short of offering compensation to those affected. While compensation was considered by the review and government ministers, it is not part of the published recommendations led by disability policy expert Liz Sayce.
Carers described the impact of the DWP’s failures as devastating, reporting stress, anxiety, and ill-health as they faced mounting debts and legal threats. Hundreds of carers were convicted of benefit fraud, despite later evidence suggesting that the overpayments were caused by errors rather than dishonesty. It remains unclear how the government will handle convictions issued under these circumstances.
Welfare Secretary Pat McFadden emphasised the importance of correcting past failures to restore trust with unpaid carers. “We inherited this mess from the previous government, but we’ve listened to carers, commissioned an independent review, and are now making good for those affected,” he said. Ministers are understood to have accepted most of the review’s 40 recommendations, including a pledge to review all carer allowance overpayments since 2015. Sayce highlighted the major impacts on carers’ health, finances, and family wellbeing caused by flawed policies.
The reassessment is likely to focus on carers whose earnings fluctuated and who were penalised despite their average income over defined periods being within allowed limits. Unpaid carers who look after loved ones for at least 35 hours a week are entitled to £83.30 weekly carer allowance, provided their weekly earnings do not exceed £196. If the threshold is exceeded even slightly, carers must repay the entire allowance for that week.
This so-called “cliff-edge” system has caused severe financial penalties, amplified by the DWP’s failure to alert carers about exceeding weekly limits, despite having access to near real-time earnings data. Overpayments were often allowed to accumulate for years before carers received large repayment demands.
Some tribunal cases this year have already sided with carers. Andrea Tucker and Nicola Green successfully argued that their part-time earnings, averaged over a year, were lawful, overturning previous overpayment penalties. Sayce emphasised that these cases reflect systemic confusion rather than deliberate fraud: “This wasn’t wilful rule-breaking – it simply wasn’t clear what earnings fluctuations carers should report.”
Many carers have expressed disappointment that the review does not include compensation for those whose lives were disrupted by DWP errors. “A lot of carers have suffered serious stress and worry over this. They’ve suffered ill-health as a result. It should be more than just about cancelling or reducing some overpayments,” one carer told the Guardian.
Carers UK welcomed the report, describing it as a “big step forward” that acknowledges “the gravity of system failures” within the DWP. Chief executive Helen Walker praised the government’s commitment to right the wrongs of the last decade. Carers Trust chief executive Kirsty McHugh echoed these sentiments, noting that confusing guidance had wrongly judged countless carers as having overpaid.
Katy Styles of the We Care Campaign stressed that if the Sayce review allows carers to claim allowance with confidence, it represents justice rather than a minor policy adjustment. “Carers deserve certainty, not constant anxiety,” she said.
The carer allowance scandal, caused by repeated DWP failures despite internal warnings and whistleblower reports, has drawn widespread public outrage and been compared to the Post Office scandal. Currently, at least 144,000 unpaid carers are repaying over £251 million in overpayments, with total incorrect payments since 2019 estimated at more than £357 million.




























































































