The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 20 tabled · 20 answered

Written questions by Vince.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by Chris Vince this session, with the full answer and department. Back to the MP page.

Department:All (20)Department of Health and Social Care (6)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (3)Ministry of Defence (2)Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (1)Home Office (1)Ministry of Justice (1)Treasury (1)Wales Office (1)Department for Business and Trade (1)Women and Equalities (1)Department for Education (1)Department for Work and Pensions (1)

Showing 11 of 1 · Department for Work and Pensions

10 Dec 2025·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

What recent estimate his Department has made of the number of households affected by the two child limit policy that are (a) two earner couple households and (b) two earner couple households in which both earners are in full time work.

Reply

a) This information is available as part of routinely released statistical series: Universal Credit claimants statistics on the two child limit policy, April 2025 - GOV.UK b) In April 2025, 3,700 couple households where both parents were earning at least the equivalent of 36.5 hours at the national living wage were affected by the two child limitNotes for part bWe have estimated full-time work status using earnings data. The earnings threshold indicative of full-time employment was estimated based on the average full-time working hours (36.5) reported by the ONS and the current National Living Wage. This is an assumption and not a standard estimate of full-time employment.Net pay was calculated using the Gov.uk online calculator.Couple household: A Universal Credit contract, which includes two adult claimants, who have dependent children.Affected: A child is affected by the two child limit policy if they are a third or subsequent dependent child born on or after 6 April 2017. This includes children with exceptions to the two-child limit.A household is affected by the policy if they have one or more affected children.Figures above have been rounded to the nearest 100.Figures are for GB.

Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.