How to Appeal to a Tribunal After Mandatory Reconsideration
Take your case to an independent judge and fight the DWP's decision
What is a Tribunal Appeal?
A tribunal is an independent panel (usually a judge, plus optional specialist members) that reviews your benefit case. Unlike the DWP, the tribunal has no stake in denying your benefit. They review the evidence fairly and decide whether the DWP's decision was legally correct. Tribunal appeals are where many unfair decisions get overturned.
Success rates vary by benefit type and grounds, but typically 30–40% of appeals succeed. With strong evidence and proper presentation, you have a real chance of winning.
What the Law Says
How to File Your Tribunal Appeal
Step 1: Get the appeal form (SSCS1). Download from gov.uk/appeal-benefit-decision or request from the DWP with your mandatory reconsideration decision letter. This form is free.
Step 2: Complete the form within 1 month of the MR decision. Include: case reference, reason you disagree, new evidence or points the DWP missed, and any adjustments you need for your hearing (accessible venue, time allowances, telephone rather than in-person).
Step 3: Submit by post, email, or online. Keep a copy. The tribunal will send you an acknowledgment and hearing date (typically 6–10 weeks away).
Step 4: Prepare your case. Gather evidence: medical records, witness statements, receipts, correspondence. Organize it logically. Write a 1–2 page summary of your key points for the tribunal judge.
What Happens at the Tribunal Hearing
Format: Usually held by video-link or telephone (ask if you prefer this). In-person hearings happen at a local tribunal office. The judge, possibly a medical or work expert, and you (plus your representative if you have one) participate.
Your case: You explain your situation. The judge will ask questions. You then listen to any DWP statement or evidence. You get a chance to respond. The whole thing takes 30–60 minutes typically.
Representation: You can represent yourself or bring a union rep, solicitor, or welfare advisor. Many people win representing themselves. If you need help, free representation is available from charities like Citizens Advice.
Decision: The tribunal may decide on the day (rare) or send a written decision within 2–4 weeks. The decision letter explains the reasoning and whether the DWP's decision is upheld, overturned, or changed.
Building a Strong Tribunal Case
- Medical evidence: Recent letters from your GP, specialist, or therapist. These carry the most weight.
- Highlight errors: Show where the DWP misunderstood your condition, misrecorded what you said, or failed to consider evidence.
- Specific examples: Instead of "I struggle with pain," explain "I can walk 50 meters before my pain becomes unbearable." Judges respond to detail.
- Witness statements: If a carer, family member, or support worker sees your condition daily, their statement carries weight.
- Point out procedural failures: Did the assessor follow the law? Did the DWP ignore medical evidence? Did they breachTimelines? These are strong appeal grounds.