DLA for children overview
This page explains what DLA for children is and how to use the DLA section of this website.
We explain the system. We do not advise on individual cases.
What is DLA for children?
DLA for children stands for Disability Living Allowance for children. It is a benefit for children under 16 who have extra care needs, walking difficulties, or both because of a disability or health condition.
What are the two components of DLA?
DLA for children has two components: a care component and a mobility component. A child may get one component, both components, or neither.
Important boundary
This website does not decide whether a child qualifies for DLA, what rate they should get, or whether a parent or carer should challenge a decision.
Official source
Check official information on GOV.UK: https://www.gov.uk/disability-living-allowance-children
Topics in this section
- DLA for children appeal
- Who can claim DLA for a child
- Why children get DLA not PIP
- DLA care rates
- DLA decision letters
- DLA higher mobility routes
- How to claim DLA for a child
- DLA renewals, reviews and changes
- Severe mental impairment and severe behavioural problems
- DLA and virtually unable to walk
- DLA care component
- DLA decisions after the claim
- DLA evidence
- DLA higher rate mobility
- DLA mandatory reconsideration
- DLA mobility component
- DLA and severe behavioural problems
- When a child on DLA turns 16
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Last reviewed: June 2026. We review this website regularly. Benefit rules and amounts can change — for current forms, deadlines and rates, always check GOV.UK. See how we keep this up to date.