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  • 7.5 million people in working households are in relative poverty
  • 2.9 million of these people are children
  • 13.4 million people across the UK are in absolute poverty

New UK poverty figures published today (Thursday) highlight the vital benefits that will come from the government having ended the two-child limit on support for low-income families, says the TUC.

The latest data is for the 12 months up to March 2025. It therefore covers just the first eight months of the Labour administration. 

That means it does not yet include the impacts of policies such as the minimum wage increase to £12.71 from April 2026, the removal of the two-child limit from April 2026, and the Make Work Pay measures that are part of the Employment Rights Act and will be implemented over the next two years.

The TUC says that this means the latest data stands as a record of the failures of Conservative government in the years from 2010 to 2024, during which child poverty in working households increased substantially.

TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said:

“Everyone who works for a living should earn a decent living. But during the years of Tory government, poverty rates for working households soared.

“The Labour government has already taken important actions to reduce poverty, but it will take some time yet for the impacts to be seen in the data.

“This includes a higher minimum wage, new rights for workers to make work pay, and an end to the two-child limit that pushed so many families into poverty.

“With Trump’s illegal war on Iran threatening a surge in energy costs, it's right that ministers are planning now for how to help households. Low-income families will need the greatest protection. The longer the war goes on, the more likely it is that Trumpflation will push up prices across the economy, and that more support will be needed.”

Editors note

HBAI release with UK annual poverty date: The full release is here: Households below average income: for financial years ending 1995 to 2025 - GOV.UK

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