Turn2us PIP Helper for MPs
The Personal Independence Payment (PIP) application process is extremely difficult to navigate and users tell us that the assessment criteria doesn’t reflect the experiences of Disabled people with a wide range of conditions.
The Turn2us PIP Helper simplifies the complex application process, making it more accessible and less daunting. It has been entirely co-produced with Disabled people, and health and disability charities to ensure relevance and build trust.
The tool walks claimants through each stage of the PIP application, checks what PIP award is likely and provides personalised tips on how to fill in an application form, making it transparent and manageable.
There are three ways that MPs can help:
- Add the Turn2us PIP Helper to your website and constituency resources.
- Share information about the Turn2us PIP Helper on your website and social media platforms.
- Work with Turn2us to incorporate the voices of people with lived experience into policy -making and drive systemic change across the social security system and beyond.
You can get in touch with us at public.affairs@turn2us.org.uk or use the button below:
Our policy calls for Government
Include Disabled people in the design of PIP
Disabled people’s insights are essential to making sure that this support meets their needs.
Recognise that disability is complex
The social security system should support those who need it with compassion and trust, addressing challenges rather than punishing people. This means improving assessments and focusing on the social model of disability, recognising the barrier Disabled people face, as well as retaining cash payments to allow Disabled people to live with dignity.
Introduce protected minimum amount of social security
Introduce an Essentials Guarantee, so that the basic rate of social security always covers life’s essentials, and ensure support is never pulled below that level so that PIP is not used to subsidise household budgets. PIP cash payments should help Disabled people with the extra cost of disability as it was designed to do.
Read our policy briefing on Reforming PIP.
Read our full response to the Government’s Consultation on PIP.
Read Alicia’s story
Originally written to feature in The House Magazine