A Minimum Income Standard for the United Kingdom in 2023 (2024)

Dramatic increases in prices over the last year present a sustained challenge to household incomes. These strains influence what people are able to do, shaping decisions about which areas of spending to prioritise, limiting choices, and ultimately affecting the extent to which people feel included in society. There continues to be a big gap between what people have and what they need for a decent standard of living. Millions of people in the UK risk falling well short of a minimum living standard. Costs continue to rise and our social security system fails to provide adequate, appropriate support. Support through the means-tested cost of living payments is welcome but does not go far enough. We urgently need a social security system that is fit for today and provides hope for tomorrow.

Key points and recommendations

  • MIS continues to provide a unique and distinctive way through which to observe and track the impact of social, economic, political and cultural change on our shared vision for higher living standards, so we can all live with dignity in the UK.
  • In 2023, we have updated MIS budgets based predominantly on price changes, as captured through the Consumer Prices Index (CPI). In updating budgets this year, we have also made use of the latest data on private rents and have recalculated domestic fuel costs rather than using CPI to uprate these categories.
  • A single person needs to earn £29,500 a year to reach a minimum acceptable standard of living in 2023. A couple with two children need to earn £50,000 between them.
  • The increase in what is needed to reach MIS over the past year has been driven by the rapidly rising cost of many goods and services. Increases in the cost of domestic fuel and food have had a notable impact.
  • April 2023 saw an inflation-based increase in benefits of 10.1%, but this follows a year in which safety-net benefits saw their greatest fall in value since annual uprating began in 1972.
  • The cost of living support payments, intended to help those households most likely to be impacted by rising costs, are welcome. But these payments do not begin to solve more deep-rooted problems with our social security system. Even with the cost of living support payments, a couple with two children, on out of work benefits, only have half of what they need for a minimum standard of living.
  • Working households can get closer to reaching MIS, but the cost of living support does little to address challenges posed by high inflation. A couple with two children, where one parent is working full-time on the National Living Wage, and the other is not working, reach 74% of MIS without the cost of living support payments. The same family only reach 77% of MIS with the payments.

For references, please see the main report

Background

Since 2008, the Minimum Income Standard (MIS) has shown what households need to spend to reach an acceptable standard of living, based on detailed deliberations by groups of members of the public. In 2023, against the backdrop of rapid increases in the cost of living, we have updated these household budgets based on price changes as captured through CPI. In 2024, all household types will be rebased: we will start from scratch with groups of members of the public, to produce detailed descriptions of the goods and services that the public agree are needed to live with dignity in the UK today. This will ensure MIS fully captures and reflects the shared vison of minimum living standards at this time of significant uncertainty and flux.

How adequate are people’s incomes on out-of-work benefits and the National Living Wage?

The report looks at how the adequacy of disposable income (income after paying taxes, housing and any childcare costs) varies across different household types. It highlights the continued – and growing – inadequacy of out-of-work benefits, as well as incomes for working households failing to meet MIS.

For those households in work, there have been gains through a 9.7% increase in the National Living Wage (NLW) in April 2023 from £9.50 to £10.42. Although this increase is above CPI inflation (8.7% in April 2023), it does not make up the gap between NLW and inflation resulting from a well below inflation increase in 2022. Critically, it also doesn’t cover the increase in the cost of a minimum budget in the past year.

In April 2023, benefits were uprated by the relevant inflation rate of 10.1%, following a ten-year period in which the uprating of safety-net benefits had predominantly been below inflation, meaning these had lost their value relative to increases in the cost of living. Although safety-net benefits have therefore seen a significant cash increase in 2023, as with the NLW, this is smaller than the increase in MIS budgets. Consequently, the adequacy of incomes on out-of-work benefits and the NLW relative to what is needed for a minimum has fallen.

The more comprehensive financial support provided to households during 2022-23 has ended, replaced by a cost-of-living payment totalling £900 in 2023-24 for low-income households in receipt of means-tested benefits. There is additional support for pensioner households and households in receipt of disability benefits.

Including this cost-of-living support, Figure 1 shows that a couple with two children on out-of-work benefits are falling short with benefits covering just half of what is needed. Even where both parents are working full time, their combined income still falls short of what they need to reach MIS. Single working-age adults without children who are receiving the cost-of-living support have just 30% of what they need on out-of-work benefits. This substantially increases to 73% of MIS when in full-time work on the NLW. Lone parents have incomes around half of MIS (52%) if out of work, and 79% if working full time on the NLW. Despite the cash increases in benefits and the NLW, and additional support being provided by the Government, many households are left with a substantial gap between what they have – their disposable income – and what they need as described and detailed through MIS.

Note: Includes cost-of-living support payments. Without these, figures are reduced from: 50% to 48% (neither working); 77% to 74% (one working full time); 88% to 86% (one working full time, one part time); and 95% to 92% (both working full time).

Minimum Income Calculator

You can use our updated Minimum Income Calculator to work out whether you earn enough for an acceptable standard of living.

A Minimum Income Standard for the United Kingdom in 2023 (2024)

FAQs

A Minimum Income Standard for the United Kingdom in 2023? ›

A single person needs to earn £29,500 a year to reach a minimum acceptable standard of living in 2023. A couple with two children need to earn £50,000 between them. The increase in what is needed to reach MIS over the past year has been driven by the rapidly rising cost of many goods and services.

What is the minimum income standard in the UK? ›

A single person needs to earn £28,000 a year to reach a minimum acceptable standard of living in 2024. A couple with 2 children need to earn £69,400 a year between them. April 2024 saw an inflation-based increase in benefits of 6.7%. However, Council Tax, water and broadband prices all rose in April.

What is a low income in the UK in 2023? ›

In 2023, low pay is defined as those earning below £10.59 per hour and high pay is defined as those earning more than £23.82 per hour.

What is the standard of living in the UK 2023? ›

There will be a very welcome 10.1 per cent rise in most social security benefits in April 2023 –in line with last September's rate of inflation – a 9.7 per cent rise in the National Living Wage, and another round of Cost of Living Payments to those receiving social security benefits or the state pension.

How much is considered low income in the UK? ›

Poverty definitions and thresholds
Household typesMinimum Income Standard - Inner London (AHC), 2023UK poverty line - After Housing Costs, 2022/23
Single, working-age£304£166
Couple, working-age£522£287
Single, pensioner£271£166
Couple, pensioner£431£287
2 more rows

How much income is enough in UK? ›

In 2023, we have calculated that a single person needs to earn £29,500 to have an acceptable standard of living, up from £25,000 in 2022. A couple with two children need to earn £50,000, compared to £44,500 in 2022.

What is UK minimum salary? ›

The rate increased to £11.44 an hour, up from £10.42. The changes, which apply across the UK, mean: A full-time adult worker paid the minimum wage will receive a pay rise worth £1,800 a year.

What is the minimum annual salary UK 2023? ›

National Minimum Wage Increase April 2023
National Minimum WageRate from April 2023Annual Salary 38 Hours Per week
National Living Wage£10.42£20,590
21 – 22 Year Old Rate£10.18£20,115
18 – 20 Year Old Rate£7.49£14,800
16 – 17 Year Old Rate£5.28£10,433
1 more row
Mar 29, 2023

What is a good salary in the UK 2023? ›

According to recent data, the average full-time wage in the UK is just under £35,000 in 2023. While that might seem like a lot, it doesn't include deductions for income tax and national insurance. What's more, rising inflation means your salary won't stretch as far as it once did.

What is the UK income allowance for 2023? ›

£12,570

What is the UK national income in 2023? ›

GDP of the UK 1948-2023

The gross domestic product of the United Kingdom in 2023 was 2.274 trillion British pounds, a slight increase when compared to the previous year, when the size of the UK economy was 2.27 trillion pounds.

Is minimum wage enough to live in the UK? ›

The minimum wage has risen this April in a boost for millions of UK workers, but charities have warned that it “falls short” of the cost of living. Known as the national living wage, payments have risen from £10.42 to £11.44 an hour.

What is the average household income in the UK in 2023? ›

Figure 5 shows that in FYE 2023, the average (median) household income before housing costs ( BHC ) was £621 per week (around £32,500 per year). This represented a decrease of 0.5% in real terms, or £3 per week, compared with FYE 2022.

What is the minimum income requirement in the UK? ›

The Government is raising the minimum income threshold from £18,600 per year to £29,000 from 11 April 2024. It will increase again to around £34,000 at an unspecified time later in 2024, and is planned to reach £38,700 in early 2025 (although this may depend on the outcome of the general election).

What is considered a low salary UK? ›

Low pay: an introduction

Low pay is defined every year in relation to the cost of living by the Minimum Income Standard Project. By their calculations, for a single person household anything less than £29,500 a year, before tax, counts as low pay.

Is 25k low income UK? ›

Earning a 25k salary in the UK can provide a reasonable income to cover living costs and maintain a comfortable lifestyle in many regions. While it might be more challenging to afford housing in expensive areas, there are still options available in other parts of the country.

What is the minimum salary threshold in UK? ›

The standard Skilled Worker Visa minimum salary is now £38,700, and £15.88 per hour, where no salary discounts are applicable. This threshold was increased for applications submitted on or after 4 April 2024. Previously, the minimum salary threshold was £26,200, which itself was an increase from £25,600 in March 2023.

Is 25 000 a year considered low income UK? ›

Taking the above areas of expenditure into account, a 25k salary generally provides the means to cover essential living costs and maintain a reasonable standard of living in most parts of the UK. However, individual circ*mstances and personal preferences can influence the suitability of this salary level.

What is normal income in UK? ›

The latest government data (published September 2024) reveals that the mean average UK weekly wage (including bonuses) across all industry sectors (in England and Wales) is £689 gross. That's the equivalent to an annual pre-tax salary of about £35,830.

What is the minimum income guarantee in England? ›

Minimum income guarantee

Under the Care Act 2014, charges must not reduce people's income below a certain amount, but local authorities can allow people to keep more of their income if they wish. This is a weekly amount and is known as the MIG .

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