When will my benefits be paid over Easter by the DWP?
As the Easter break approaches, some changes will be made to your benefit payment dates.
The first day of the long Easter weekend is the Good Friday bank holiday (18 April) with a second bank holiday falling on Easter Monday (21 April).
It's worth marking those dates if they match with when your payments are due.
Here's what you need to know about when your payment dates fall this Easter — and why they have changed.
Any benefit payments due on 18 April or 21 April will come into bank accounts on 17 April instead.
This will be the case if you claim universal credit, carer's allowance, PIP or pension credit — as well as the state pension.
The full list of the benefits can be found below.
Attendance allowance
Carer's allowance
Employment support allowance (ESA)
Income support
Jobseeker's allowance (JSA)
Pension credit
Personal independence payment (PIP)
State pension
Universal credit
Sometimes child benefit bank holiday payment dates differ. However, over Easter and payments due on 21 April will be paid on 17 April instead.
It's worth bearing in mind that if your payment date doesn't fall on a bank holiday this April, your payments will be made as normal.
As the Department for Work and Pension's website states (DWP), if your benefit payment date is on a weekend or a bank holiday you'll usually be paid on the working day before.
This is because government workers and phone lines will not be staffed — for the most part — over the bank holiday period.
In some cases, this is also done to assist people with any extra costs they are facing over holidays like Christmas.
It's also worth bearing in mind that while your benefits may be paid early, this will mean your money has to stretch for longer.
Want to make a note of the rest of the benefits payment date clashes expected this year? Then consult the table below.
21 April 2025
17 April
5 May 2025
2 May
26 May 2025
23 May
14 July 2025
15 July (Northern Ireland only)
15 July 2025
16 July (Northern Ireland only)
4 August 2025
5 August (Scotland only)
25 August 2025
22 August
29 December 2025
30 December (Northern Ireland only)
30 December 2025
31 December (Northern Ireland only)
If your benefits payments do not arrive on 17 April, your first step should be to check your bank account to confirm whether the money has landed.
If your expected payment date is correct and the funds are missing, you should contact the following relevant helpline:
Universal credit: Use your online account or call the helpline on 0800 328 5644
PIP: Contact the PIP enquiry line on 0800 121 4433
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
DWP has new 13-week rule for people on PIP and Universal Credit
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has announced a new 13-week rule for people on Personal Independence Payment (PIP) as part of its massive benefits cuts. The DWP confirmed the Bill this week, with £5 billion worth of savings expected from it. But despite cuts, the DWP offered people on PIP somewhat of a boost via a 13-week transitional phase which has been introduced before stopping payments. It offers additional time for those affected by changes to the PIP daily living component. Ir is set to benefit current recipients who may lose their entitlement to Carers Allowance and the carer's element of Universal Credit due to the amendments. READ MORE: NS&I handing 'bonus' to millions of people who have Premium Bonds READ MORE: DWP told to scrap 'unsustainable' state pension triple lock and replace it READ MORE New UK heatwave set to hit next week with 22 counties in England roasted The transitional protection significantly exceeds the duration offered during the transition from Disability Living Allowance (DLA) to PIP, which was previously the primary disability benefit in the UK before PIP took over. Labour Party minister Liz Kendall said: "Our social security system is at a crossroads. Unless we reform it, more people will be denied opportunities, and it may not be there for those who need it. "This legislation represents a new social contract and marks the moment we take the road of compassion, opportunity and dignity. "This will give people peace of mind, while also fixing our broken social security system so it supports those who can work to do so while protecting those who cannot - putting welfare spending on a more sustainable path to unlock growth as part of our Plan for Change." Thomas Lawson, CEO of anti-poverty charity Turn2us, said: "There is no moral justification for cutting the support that allows sick and disabled people to meet their basic needs, live independently, and fully take part in society. "The positive plans of the government's longer-term reforms are being undermined by these harmful Treasury-driven cuts. Stripping away support will push people deeper into hardship, not employment. It will worsen health conditions, and make recovery harder."

Business Insider
17 hours ago
- Business Insider
Love, money, and yarn balls
Crystal Sloane is a pro at turning spun cotton into intricate, handmade figurines. There are seasonally themed ornaments like Santas and snowmen at Christmas, or radishes and turnips that can be personalized with the face of a loved one printed on them to celebrate spring. Crystal has been selling her work on Etsy since the dawn of the site 20 years ago. She got successful enough at dreaming up and making the quirky, vintage-inspired, custom items to quit her graphic design job in 2009 and pursue her artistic career full time. Two years later, and pregnant with her first child, she realized she needed to hire help. Instead of finding someone to pack orders and send emails and paying them out of her then $75,000 earnings, Crystal looked to her husband, Ben. He wasn't as happy with his job as a therapist at that point, and Crystal needed the help; so he quit to work for her — or, as they would debate and determine, with her. They started juggling the business baby and a new baby, but now, what was once Crystal's handmade hobby business has been supporting their family for 14 years. In a survey by Etsy in 2024, 83% of US sellers identified as women. Thirty percent of sellers said they did their work full time, rather than as an Etsy side hustle. More than half said that they sold their first goods on Etsy and that they started the business to make money while doing something they enjoy. The average Etsy seller said they spent just over half their time making and designing items, while the rest was eaten up by administrative work. Nearly 80% said they wanted to grow their businesses, but more than half said they didn't want to have to hire someone else to help. For some, there's no need to put out an ad on Craigslist or Indeed. Enter: the husband helper. Move over, Instagram boyfriend — this is a promotion that involves more work behind the scenes than just finding the perfect photo angle. Some successful shops run by women are doing so well that they can turn into not just full-time jobs, but careers stable enough to support spouses and families, too. It's a trend that also lives outside Etsy: More women are starting businesses, and more people want to work for themselves. These artists are living new twists on the family-run business, one that often involves a side-hustle turned career in crafting, an area dominated by women. Etsy has emerged as a place that, for those who hit it big, can bring life-changing money. Working with a spouse isn't all smooth sailing. At first, Crystal says, she had some trouble giving up her full autonomy over her shop, Vintage by Crystal, and Ben asked many detailed questions as she delegated. Over time, it became not just Crystal's project, but a company fully run by the couple, and Ben's name now appears alongside hers in the online shop. She still manages the artistic vision and works with her hands to make teeny tiny details for the ornaments, but he now manages the business side. "It was just a learning curve," Ben tells me. That also meant managing expectations and the work style of his wife. "I was so used to doing everything and being in charge of everything and having it all done my way," Crystal says. "We argued for a second about which kind of packing tape we should get, but then I was like, wait, that, that's his business." Etsy couples are a niche of a larger trend: 2021 data from the Census Bureau's Annual Business Survey indicated 10% of US businesses were owned and operated by spouses — and another 11% were jointly owned by couples but operated separately, with men more likely to be the main person operating the business, according to a Pew Research Center analysis. In 2023, McKinsey found that family-owned businesses generated higher profits (an average of $77 million between 2017 and 2022, compared with $66 million for other companies). Family-owned businesses that are less than 25 years old also grow twice as fast as other ownership structures, as founder entrepreneurial energy can lead to more aggressive growth that slows over time. Kathy Marshack, a psychologist who's the author of "Entrepreneurial Couples: Making It Work at Work and at Home," says much research on family businesses largely focuses on the economics and business side, but less on the effects on the family. "There's still a difference between romance and work partnership," Marshack tells me. "I have plenty of those couples who come in and say: 'What are we doing? Our marriage is falling apart, and our business is successful.' And it's because it gets hard; those boundaries are hard. Am I your lover right now, or am I your boss?" But relationships and business partnerships do have threads in common: "One of the greatest preventers of burnout is feeling connected to your colleagues," says Karen Bridbord, an organizational psychologist who specializes in executive coaching for company founders and is a certified therapist with The Gottman Institute. "I would argue that is important in a marriage as well." When people feel that they're carrying their weight and their spouse or coworkers are doing the same, satisfaction increases. For some couples, spreadsheets and brainstorming are all part of the romance. Gabriela Baiter and Drew Downie saw a matched ambition in one another — for them, a romantic getaway was a weekend coming up with business ideas on the Oregon coast. In 2017, they found their big break in an eyesore in their small apartment: an ugly dog bed for their 13-year-old black Labrador, Gable. The two turned a cobbled-together prototype into a scaled-up business and now run Lay Lo Pets, designing stylish dog beds from Palm Springs. Baiter quit her marketing career to go full time for Lay Lo in 2023, and Downie followed, leaving behind his work as a creative director in 2024. "We had this moment and this realization of like, is this a hobby or is this a business?" Baiter says. Since they both started working on Lay Lo full time and launched a virtual dog training component, their gross revenue from the business has more than doubled, they tell me. Being in business together means the meeting day never really ends, but Baiter and Downie see that as a perk. "I could not imagine building a business any other way," she tells me. Ideas come to them early in the morning, when they're making pancakes for their kids, or when they're on vacation in tiny hotel rooms (their pet company came to be over shared frustrations in their tiny apartment, after all). The push behind Etsy is that anyone, even a novice crafter, can make it big. Sarah Cambio bought a used sewing machine off Facebook Marketplace in 2020 and taught herself to make doll and baby clothes. She figured she might sell some stuff on Etsy while taking care of her three kids full time, using the money for little expenses or as fun spending money. She tried out a few items, but her shop started to boom when she listed six fabric crowns for children that sold out immediately. Sarah called her husband, Brent, from the crafts chain Joann, unsure how much fabric to buy with the new interest. It was the turning point of a business that's since ballooned. Brent started helping her to set financial goals or find new ways to source materials, so they wouldn't have to drive an hour from their Maryland home to buy what she needed. Brent, Sarah says, sees the big picture of the businesses, leaving her to handle the creative details, such as intricate embroidery, small pom-poms, and ribbons. "I tone him down, and he tries to hype me up a little bit," Sarah says. The shop, Flower Lane, made its first $100,000 in less than a year, the couple tells me. That rapid jump meant a shift in focusing on Sarah's career after moving around for Brent's — earlier in their marriage, Sarah took care of the kids primarily while Brent was in the Air Force, but her success on Etsy let her art become a focus for the family. "She didn't really have time to really set down and establish a career," Brent says. "I was just happy to see her get back into her artistic self, and it made her happy, so I was happy if she made $5 million or $5." On their first date, Adrian Krawiec told his now wife, Emily Phillippy, that he believed she would one day own her own jewelry store; he says he wanted to flatter her, but he also saw her dedication to her art, as she showed up an hour late, held up working in her studio. Over the next decade, she slowly went out on her own as a designer, and Krawiec pushed her to join Etsy, though she's left the site since to focus on her store. Her business grew, and when Phillippy went to open her storefront for Emily Chelsea Jewelry in Philadelphia in 2021, Krawiec quit his job at corporate Ikea after 18 years with the company and started working for Phillippy — just as the two had their first child. They draw clear lines about the business; they avoid talking work at home, and it's distinctly Phillippy's. "Her name is on the building," says Krawiec, who works as the senior director. "I've always looked at it like it's hers, and largely speaking, my job description has always been to make her job as easy as possible." It's easy to blur those boundaries accidentally, either by bringing work home or slipping out of boss mode. "Adrian helps the business so much in making it so much more profitable, so much more organized, and so he still is involved a lot in the decision-making, and I still will be like, 'Should I do this?' And he'll be like, 'I don't know, you're the owner.'" Krawiec plans to start working at the shop less and become more of an advisor, the couple tells me. It will mean more autonomy over the business again for Phillippy and a chance for Krawiec to explore other parts of his life. "I'm such an independent person, and we did it for four years, but that was not my vision," Phillippy says of working closely together. Marriage vows are forever; business plans are not.


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
Sit pretty (for less): This outdoor sectional is 40% off for early Prime Day
It may not be Christmas, but it's the best time of the year for folks who like to save big. Yes, I'm talking Prime Day. Did you forget? According to the mega-retailer's recent announcement, the event will be from July 8 through July 11. Prime members will enjoy two extra days of savings on major brands, including Samsung, Kiehl's, and Levi's. Although the major shopping event is a few weeks away, there are already early Prime Day deals available, and in our experience, sometimes they're just as good (if not better) than the ones available during the official sale. Case in point: This 7-Seat Wicker Conversation Set Sectional from Best Choice Products, currently discounted nearly 40% off. Advertisement The modular sofa can be customized to match your deck, features oversized cushions, and offers the type of comfort that makes it a little too easy to spend the entire day dozing in the sun. Amazon Pros: Can be arranged in multiple ways to fit your patio or deck exactly how you need it Throw pillows and coffee table with a tempered glass top included Easy setup Cons: Not the best option for those who dislike wicker Allow the Best Choice 7-Seat Wicker Conversation Set Sectional to be the star of your next BBQ. Thousands of Amazon shoppers have! The sectional offers extra-large, overly stuffed cushioned seats, each with a protective, water-resistant cover. The wicker is tightly woven and reinforced with powder-coated steel for durability and longevity, so you and your family can fully enjoy the comfy seating without worry about it getting bent out of shape before summer's end. Available in 28 styles, two decorative pillows are included, as well as a coffee table to rest your feet (or cocktails) on. While the sectional typically retails for $800, it's currently only $500 as an early Prime Day deal. If you're not convinced that this is the right sectional for you, check out the different ways it can be arranged. RELATED: Best places to buy outdoor patio furniture Amazon Amazon See? I rest my case. Hundreds of Amazon shoppers have given the conversation set a five-star review, resulting in more than 3,000 star ratings. Many praise it for its durability, easy setup and quality, which is exceptionally high, considering its low price. 'Different brands use cheap cushion fabric,' wrote one reviewer. 'This company does not. The cushions are top quality.' 'This is a solid set for a great price,' shared another happy customer, who included a photo of his dog on the couch in his review. The 7-Seat Wicker Conversation Set Sectional ships directly from Best Choice Products, and can be at your home long before official Prime Day kicks off. However, I can't promise its 40% off sale tag will last, so this is the time to grab. Looking for a headline-worthy haul? Keep shopping Post Wanted. For over 200 years, the New York Post has been America's go-to source for bold news, engaging stories, in-depth reporting, and now, insightful shopping guidance. We're not just thorough reporters – we sift through mountains of information, test and compare products, and consult experts on any topics we aren't already schooled specialists in to deliver useful, realistic product recommendations based on our extensive and hands-on analysis. Here at The Post, we're known for being brutally honest – we clearly label partnership content, and whether we receive anything from affiliate links, so you always know where we stand. We routinely update content to reflect current research and expert advice, provide context (and wit) and ensure our links work. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change.