Universal Credit on £800/month
Single claimant 25+ · No children · No housing element · 2025-26
Universal Credit calculation — £800/month earnings
| Gross monthly earnings | £800/month |
| Net earnings (after IT + NI) | £800/month |
| UC standard allowance (single 25+) | £333.76/month |
| UC reduction (net earnings × 55%) | −£440/month |
| Universal Credit award | Nil |
| Net earnings + UC = total | £800/month |
Frequently asked questions
How much Universal Credit will I get if I earn £800/month?
At £800/month gross, your net earnings after Income Tax and NI are £800/month. This exceeds the UC taper-out point of approximately £607/month net, so your Universal Credit award is nil at this income level. You have earned too much to receive UC as a single claimant without children.
How is Universal Credit calculated when working?
Universal Credit uses net earnings (after Income Tax and NI) to calculate the taper. The standard allowance (£333.76/month for single 25+) is reduced by 55p for every £1 of net earnings. If you have children or Limited Capability for Work, a work allowance applies before the taper starts — meaning you can earn more before UC reduces.
At what income does Universal Credit stop?
For a single claimant aged 25+ with no children and no housing element, UC tapers to nil at approximately £607/month net earnings (£333.76 ÷ 0.55). At £800/month gross, your net earnings are £800/month — which exceeds this threshold, so UC is nil.
Does Universal Credit count my gross or net earnings?
Universal Credit uses net earnings — your pay after Income Tax and National Insurance are deducted. This means PAYE employees automatically have their UC calculated correctly via HMRC Real Time Information (RTI). Self-employed claimants report net earnings via a monthly assessment, subject to the Minimum Income Floor if earnings are below what DWP expects.