PolicyLens

Labour - Welfare

Remove the two-child limit

Scrap the Universal Credit two-child limit from April 2026.

Last updated: May 2026.

Read the policy-specific methodology note

Policy baseline

Budget 2025 removes the Universal Credit two-child limit from April 2026. Official costings include increased take-up behaviour.

  • Targets low-income families with three or more children.
  • Government says 450,000 children leave poverty.
  • Take-up assumptions are uncertain.

Core trade-offs

The direct beneficiaries are low-income larger families and children. The costs fall mainly on taxpayers funding higher uc spending. The main economic question is poverty falls but work incentives need monitoring.

  • Low-income larger families and children gain most directly.
  • Costs fall mainly on taxpayers funding higher uc spending.
  • Key risk: poverty falls but work incentives need monitoring.

Fiscal impact by 2028-29

+GBP 2.4bn to +GBP 4.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 2.8bn.

  • Positive numbers mean net fiscal cost; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
  • Main channel is the scored tax, spending or delivery change.
  • Offsets depend on tax receipts, behaviour and pass-through.
  • Range reflects uncertain implementation and economic response.
  • This is not an official costing.

Economic impact by 2028-29

  • Jobs: Work incentives may weaken or strengthen depending on taper design and childcare constraints.
  • Wages: Household incomes rise for recipients; wages change only if labour supply shifts.
  • Prices: Extra demand can lift local prices slightly; national inflation effects should be small.
  • GDP / productivity: Long-run gains depend on child outcomes; near-term output effects are mostly demand-side.

Assessment

This is a real trade-off, not a free gain. Low-income larger families and children benefit, while taxpayers funding higher uc spending bear most costs. Overall output depends on behaviour, capacity and pass-through.

Confidence: Medium-low. Higher on the policy target and fiscal channel; lower on behaviour, pass-through and economy-wide effects.

Main risks

  • Work incentives: Higher payments can weaken work incentives unless childcare and taper design are careful.
  • Take-up uncertainty: Costs rise if eligible households claim more than expected.
  • Poverty persistence: Cash support helps, but does not remove housing, childcare and health constraints.

Safeguards

  • Protect work incentives with taper analysis.
  • Publish take-up and poverty impacts.
  • Pair cash support with childcare and housing supply.

Academic evidence

Card, Kluve and Weber, Journal of the European Economic Association, 2018

Active labour-market programmes

Employment programmes often perform better over the medium term than immediately, with design varying sharply.

Supports scepticism about quick employment savings.

What Works? A Meta Analysis of Active Labor Market Programs (2018)

UK government evidence

HM Treasury, 2025

Budget 2025 measures

Budget 2025 sets out implemented welfare, energy, motoring and tax-threshold measures.

Used for current government delivery policies.

Budget 2025 (2025)

HM Treasury, 2025

Budget 2025 costings

Costings provide scored fiscal impacts for the two-child limit, salary sacrifice and EV mileage charge.

Used where government costings exist.

Budget 2025 policy costings (2025)

Sources

Other Labour policies

PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and should not be treated as official costings.