Reports of a “£562 DWP payment” for pensioners born before 1961 need careful explaining. The latest official UK information does not show a new standalone automatic payment of exactly £562 for every pensioner.
Instead, the figure is best understood as a rough shorthand for a mix of support that some older people may receive through the 2026/27 State Pension increase, possible Pension Credit backdating, and, for eligible households, the Winter Fuel Payment.
What the £562 figure really refers to
For the 2026/27 tax year, the full new State Pension is rising from £230.25 to £241.30 a week, while the full basic State Pension is rising from £176.45 to £184.90 a week. Those figures are confirmed in the DWP’s official benefit and pension rates publication.
That means someone on the full new State Pension will get £11.05 more per week, which works out to about £574.60 more per year. Someone on the full basic State Pension will get £8.45 more per week, or about £439.40 more per year.
So the widely shared £562 number is not an official flat-rate payment; it is closer to an estimate some people are using to describe the scale of annual pension uplift or combined support. This is an inference from the official rates, not a separate DWP scheme.
Why “born before 1961” matters
The birth-year reference matters because the State Pension age begins rising from 66 to 67 between 2026 and 2028. Official timetables show that people born between 6 April 1960 and 5 March 1961 reach State Pension age at 66 plus a number of months, while those born from 6 March 1961 reach it at 67.
Also, pension type depends on date of birth. Report says men born on or after 6 April 1951 and women born on or after 6 April 1953 are generally in the new State Pension system; older people may still be on the basic State Pension system. That is one reason older pensioners can receive different weekly amounts.
Eligibility and payment dates
The 2026/27 State Pension rates apply from 6 April 2026. State Pension is usually paid every 4 weeks, and the day depends on the last two digits of your National Insurance number. For the new State Pension, your first payment is due no later than 5 weeks after the date you choose, then every 4 weeks after that.
People on low incomes should also check Pension Credit. Reports claims can be backdated by up to 3 months, which means a successful claimant could receive a larger first payment covering arrears.
For 2026/27, the DWP rates publication shows the Pension Credit standard minimum guarantee at £238.00 a week for a single person and £363.25 a week for a couple where both reached State Pension age on or after 1 April 2021. For older mixed rules, the same publication lists £256.00 for a single/lone parent of State Pension age or over and £383.35 for a couple of State Pension age or over.
Winter Fuel Payment and extra help
For winter 2025 to 2026, reports says you could get a Winter Fuel Payment if you were born before 22 September 1959 and live in England or Wales. The payment is £200 if you were born between 22 September 1945 and 21 September 1959, and £300 if you were born before 22 September 1945. Care home rates can be lower.
DWP pension support at a glance
| Item | Latest official detail |
|---|---|
| Full new State Pension 2026/27 | £241.30 a week |
| Full new State Pension 2025/26 | £230.25 a week |
| Full basic State Pension 2026/27 | £184.90 a week |
| Full basic State Pension 2025/26 | £176.45 a week |
| State Pension uprating date | 6 April 2026 for 2026/27 rates |
| Pension Credit backdating | Up to 3 months |
| Winter Fuel Payment eligibility | Born before 22 September 1959; England/Wales rules |
| Winter Fuel Payment amount | £100 to £300, depending on age and circumstances |
FAQs
Is there a new automatic £562 DWP payment for all pensioners born before 1961?
No. Official GOV.UK sources do not show a universal new one-off £562 payment. The figure is better understood as an estimate or combination of other pension-related support.
When will the higher State Pension be paid?
The new weekly rates apply from 6 April 2026. State Pension is usually paid every 4 weeks, based on your National Insurance number.
How can pensioners increase what they receive?
Checking eligibility for Pension Credit is one of the biggest steps, because claims can be backdated by 3 months and may unlock extra support.
