PIP appeal advice

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cdt8100
cdt8100 Online Community Member Posts: 2 Listener
edited 2:37PM in PIP, DLA, ADP and AA

Good morning

First time posting here, just hoping for some advice and guidance on the ongoing saga we seem to be having in trying to claim PIP.

My partner made a claim for PIP in September 2024. We looked online at the questions and how many points you score and from that we believe she should receive the higher rate of daily living and for mobility.

DWP disagreed and said she wasn't entitled to anything. That decision was in January 2025.

We asked for a reconsideration and wrote them a letter to explain why we didn't agree with their decision. Around this time, my partner was also diagnosed with an additional condition and since that her health has deteriorated further and she needs more help.

DWP said no to the reconsideration.

We then lodged an appeal and have now received a bundle of documents from DWP including a copy of the original claim form and why they believe my partner isn't entitled to anything.

The tribunal service wrote to us saying an appeal could take months to even be booked in.

It's all very deflating and we just don't know what to do. Neither of us have experience of applying for benefits and admittedly, knowing what we've now learnt, we should have given better and more detailed descriptions on the original application of what help my partner needs. We focused too much on how her conditions make her feel.

My partner cannot work as much as she did previously and it may come to the stage where she cannot work at all, so financially, we could really do with her PIP claim being successful and soon.

Do we just wait for the appeal or is there any benefit in making a new claim?

Sorry, this post ended up being longer than I planned. Thank you.

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Comments

  • OverlyAnxious
    OverlyAnxious Online Community Member Posts: 4,666 Championing

    Hi,

    PIP isn't designed to support people out of work or on reduced earnings. That's covered by Universal Credit and/or New Style ESA, depending on exact circumstances.

    In this case, if you feel you could provide more evidence to meet the PIP descriptors, and if there has also been a further decline in ability since the original decision, then I would say it is worth putting in a new claim rather than waiting for the appeal.

    If the new claim is successful, you can then choose to either cancel the appeal, or continue it in the hope of getting some back payment.

  • cdt8100
    cdt8100 Online Community Member Posts: 2 Listener

    Thank you for your advice.

    Yes I know it isn't meant to help with financial issues, but having disabilities and medical conditions takes it toll financially when it means people are unable to work, or not work as much.

    But we do genuinely believe that even before the initial decision was made and before my partner's condition worsened, that she was entitled to pip.

    I also believe a new claim might be the best way to go but obviously my partner doesn't want to go through the stress of doing that again.

    I read on another topic on here that someone was denied pip but then reapplied with the same conditions but just re worded their form and they got pip. It seems ridiculous but then dwp do seem to be a shambles.

    If my partner did put in a new claim and was awarded pip, but still went ahead with the appeal but lost, which decision would stand? The appeal and she would get nothing?

    Thank you.

  • Trevor_PIP
    Trevor_PIP Online Community Member Posts: 228 Empowering

    Mandatory Reconsiderations rarely change the original decision. You could wait up to a year or more for your tribunal. You can put in a new claim or a Change of Circumstances while you await a tribunal. Both are new claims. A new claim would supersede any decision from your original tribunal as the tribunal is for your original claim only.

    I filled out my own PIP forms with no help or advice and in hindsight I may have done things different, you did your best. You can put forward more detail and evidence for the tribunal.

    I can't advise you what to do, that is down to you and your partner.

  • OverlyAnxious
    OverlyAnxious Online Community Member Posts: 4,666 Championing

    If she was awarded PIP from a new claim, then the tribunal should only cover the time between the initial claim starting and the new claim starting. The tribunal award should not over-ride the new award.

    Unfortunately PIP assessors are human and therefore not all equal. Many don't fully understand the descriptors, some over-score, some under-score. Same as a car MOT, you can fail an MOT and get loads of advisories at one place, then take it to another tester and get a completely different set of results.