PIP mobility points table
The mobility component of PIP is scored using two activities — moving around and planning and following journeys. This page explains how the points work.
We explain the system. We do not advise on individual cases.
How the mobility points work
The mobility part of PIP looks at just two activities: planning and following journeys, and moving around. As with daily living, each activity has a set of descriptors worth different points, and only the single highest descriptor that applies in each activity is counted.
The points from the two activities are added together to give a mobility total.
How many points are needed
| Total mobility points | Result |
|---|---|
| 0–7 points | No mobility award |
| 8–11 points | Standard rate mobility |
| 12 or more points | Enhanced rate mobility |
Daily living is scored separately. See the PIP daily living points table.
The two mobility activities and their points
1. Planning and following journeys
| Descriptor | Points |
|---|---|
| Can plan and follow a journey unaided | 0 |
| Needs prompting to undertake a journey to avoid overwhelming psychological distress | 4 |
| Cannot plan the route of a journey | 8 |
| Cannot follow the route of an unfamiliar journey without help, an assistance dog or an aid | 10 |
| Cannot undertake any journey because it would cause overwhelming psychological distress | 10 |
| Cannot follow the route of a familiar journey without help, an assistance dog or an aid | 12 |
2. Moving around
| Descriptor | Points |
|---|---|
| Can stand and move more than 200 metres | 0 |
| Can stand and move more than 50 but no more than 200 metres | 4 |
| Can stand and move unaided more than 20 but no more than 50 metres | 8 |
| Can stand and move using an aid more than 20 but no more than 50 metres | 10 |
| Can stand and move more than 1 but no more than 20 metres | 12 |
| Cannot stand, or move more than 1 metre | 12 |
The same key rules apply
As with daily living, two rules matter:
More than half the days. A descriptor only applies if it is true on more than 50% of days across the 12-month period (3 months before and 9 months after the claim).
Reliably. A person counts as able to move around or follow a journey only if they can do it safely, to an acceptable standard, repeatedly, and in a reasonable time. See PIP reliability rules.
A worked example
This is a general illustration of how the points add up. It is not advice and does not predict any real decision — only the DWP decides, based on each person’s circumstances and evidence.
Imagine a person who, on more than half of days:
- can stand and then move more than 50 metres but no more than 200 metres — Moving around: 4 points
- needs prompting to make a journey to avoid overwhelming psychological distress — Planning and following journeys: 4 points
Adding these gives 4 + 4 = 8 points, which in this illustration reaches the standard rate mobility threshold. A person who cannot follow a familiar journey unaided could score 12 points in a single activity, reaching the enhanced rate.
Next steps
- See the PIP daily living points table.
- Read more about PIP mobility.
- Understand the PIP reliability rules.
- Official source: GOV.UK — how your disability affects you.
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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.