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Benefits glossary
Plain-English meanings of the words and abbreviations used on this website and in benefit letters.
We explain the system. We do not advise on individual cases.
- Attendance Allowance
- A benefit for people over State Pension age who need help or supervision because of a health condition or disability. It has no mobility part. See Attendance Allowance.
- Appeal
- Asking an independent tribunal to look at a benefit decision again, after a mandatory reconsideration. The tribunal is separate from the DWP.
- Appointee
- A person allowed to manage someone’s benefit claim and payments on their behalf, usually when that person cannot manage it themselves. Arranged through the DWP.
- Care component
- The part of DLA for children (and the daily living idea in other benefits) that is about help with personal care and supervision.
- Carer’s Allowance
- A weekly payment for someone who cares at least 35 hours a week for a person on a qualifying disability benefit. See Carer’s Allowance.
- Daily living component
- The part of PIP about everyday activities such as preparing food, washing, dressing and managing money.
- Descriptor
- One of the set statements in the PIP test that describes a level of difficulty with an activity. Each descriptor is worth a number of points.
- DLA
- Disability Living Allowance. On this website it means DLA for children under 16. See DLA for children.
- DWP
- The Department for Work and Pensions — the government department that runs most benefits.
- Enhanced rate
- The higher of the two PIP rates for a component, paid when someone scores 12 or more points.
- Mandatory reconsideration (MR)
- Asking the DWP to look at a decision again. This is usually required before you can appeal.
- Mobility component
- The part of PIP or DLA about getting around — both planning journeys and moving around physically.
- Points
- Numbers given for each PIP activity based on the descriptor that applies. They are added up to decide the rate.
- Qualifying period
- A length of time your difficulties must have lasted (and be expected to last) before a benefit can be paid.
- Reliability rule
- The principle that you must be able to do an activity safely, to an acceptable standard, repeatedly and in a reasonable time — or you are treated as unable to do it. See reliability rules.
- SMI
- Severe Mental Impairment — a specific term in the DLA rules. See severe mental impairment.
- SR1
- A form a doctor or nurse uses to confirm someone is nearing the end of life, used to fast-track some benefits. See .
- Standard rate
- The lower of the two PIP rates for a component, paid when someone scores 8 to 11 points.
- Tribunal
- An independent panel (part of the courts service, not the DWP) that hears benefit appeals.
- VUW
- Virtually Unable to Walk — a route to the higher DLA mobility rate. See virtually unable to walk.
Official source
For official definitions, forms and current rules, always check GOV.UK.
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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.