DLA to PIP Transition: Your Rights Explained

Understand migration, new assessments, and how to appeal if you lose benefit

Quick Answer: DLA is being phased out and replaced with PIP. If you're being migrated, you'll receive a letter, have 1 month to return the form, then face a PIP assessment. Many people lose benefit during migration due to the different scoring system. If assessed unfairly, you can appeal. About 40% of appeals succeed, and you continue receiving DLA while you appeal.

DLA vs. PIP: What's Changed

Disability Living Allowance (DLA) is being replaced by Personal Independence Payment (PIP) for working-age adults (16–64). PIP is a needs-based benefit like DLA, but the assessment criteria and scoring are different. Some people maintain their benefit level, some get higher amounts, and some lose benefit entirely—even if their condition hasn't changed.

The change isn't automatic or fair. If you're losing benefit, appealing can be worthwhile: a significant proportion of appeals succeed, especially when you provide strong medical evidence showing your continued needs.

What the Law Says

Welfare Reform Act 2012 Section 78–91 Establishes PIP as the replacement for DLA. Existing DLA recipients must migrate to PIP. The law guarantees a transition period with continued payment while assessed. You have the same appeal rights for PIP as any other benefit.
DLA Regulations 1991 (amended) Sets the transition timeline and rules. The DWP must give you notice, allow time to submit a form, and continue DLA payments during assessment and appeal. DLA can only stop once PIP decision is made.
Social Security Act 1998 Section 11–12 Gives you full appeal rights: mandatory reconsideration and tribunal appeal if you lose benefit during migration. Your appeal rights are identical to new claims.

The Migration Process

Step 1: You receive a migration letter. The DWP notifies you that you're being invited to claim PIP. Your DLA continues while you're assessed.

Step 2: Complete the PIP form within 1 month. The form asks about personal care and mobility. Be detailed: describe your worst day, not your average day. Include all difficulties, not just physical.

Step 3: Attend PIP assessment (if required). Based on your form and medical records, the DWP may invite you to a face-to-face assessment. Prepare as you would for any PIP claim.

Step 4: DWP makes a decision. You're awarded PIP at a certain rate, or awarded at a lower rate, or receive nothing. If you lose benefit, you have 1 month to request mandatory reconsideration.

Why Many Lose Benefit During Migration

Protecting Your Benefit During Migration

Be thorough on the PIP form. Use the same detail as for a new claim. Don't assume the assessor will remember your DLA history. Provide examples of how your condition affects daily activities.

Gather updated medical evidence. Letters from your GP, specialist, or therapist describing your current needs. Assessments from 2+ years ago may be outdated; ask for recent letters.

Explain changes. If your condition has changed (improved or worsened), explain why and how it affects you now. Honesty strengthens your case.

Appeal if you lose benefit. Don't assume the decision is final. Request mandatory reconsideration within 1 month. If rejected, appeal to the tribunal. Your DLA continues while you appeal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will I definitely lose DLA when I migrate to PIP?
No. About 1 in 3 people maintain the same benefit level or higher during migration. It depends on your condition and how well you present your needs. If you lose benefit, appealing gives you another chance.
Can I delay my migration if I'm not ready?
The DWP has a timeline for migration, but you can request a one-month extension if needed. However, you can't avoid migration indefinitely. You must provide the form within the extended deadline.
What happens to my DLA while I appeal a PIP decision?
Your DLA continues at the same rate while you appeal—it doesn't stop until your appeal is finally decided or you withdraw it. This protection is called a "transitional" or "continuing payment."
If I win my appeal, do I get backpay?
Yes. If you're awarded PIP during appeal, you get backdated payment from the date your DLA stopped (or from the original PIP decision date if higher). You also continue receiving DLA until the PIP backpay is paid.
Can a change in my condition during assessment affect my score?
Yes. If your condition genuinely changed (improved or worsened) between DLA and PIP assessment, the assessor should account for this. However, one-off better days don't change the assessment. Bring evidence of sustained change.
Appeal Your PIP Migration Decision