Low-income households still falling short of minimum living standard despite wage rises

Typical suburban skyline
  • A single person needs to earn £30,500 a year to reach the minimum income standard in 2025
  • A working-age couple without children needs £43,000 (£21,500 each) to have enough disposable income to reach MIS
  • A working-age couple with two children aged three and seven needs to earn £74,000 a year between them to achieve MIS
  • Single pensioners would need £17,400 per year to reach MIS if receiving Pension Credit, rising to £19,000 if their income was from the full State Pension and they were not receiving the Winter Fuel Payment
  • A pensioner couple on Pension Credit need £29,000 a year, while those receiving only the State Pension need £29,200

Many UK households are falling short of what they need for a minimum socially acceptable standard of living – even when working full-time – according to new research.

The Minimum Income Standard (MIS) 2025 report reveals that, despite increases to the National Living Wage (NLW) and a stabilisation of inflation compared with the peaks of 2022–23, incomes from work and benefits are still not enough to provide what’s needed to live with dignity.

Academics from Loughborough University’s Centre for Research in Social Policy (CRSP) carried out the research for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF).

They found that a single person now needs to earn £30,500 a year to reach MIS in 2025, while a couple with two children, aged three and seven, needs £74,000 a year between them.

The findings show that:

  • A couple with two children where one parent works full-time on the NLW and the other is not working, reaches just 66% of MIS
  • A single working-age adult working full-time on the NLW reaches 76% of MIS, compared with 77% in 2024
  • Lone parents fare worst, reaching 69% of MIS even when working full-time on the NLW

The research shows that working-age couples without children, both in full-time work on the NLW, are the only household type included in the analysis whose income is sufficient to reach MIS.

Dr Juliet Stone, lead author and Research Fellow at CRSP, said: “Despite the Labour Government’s stated commitment to improving living standards, there has been or no change in the extent to which minimum wages and benefits provide enough for households to reach MIS.

“It is clear that many people on low-to-middle incomes are still struggling to reach a minimum standard of living, and bold policy decisions are needed if Labour are to deliver on their ambitions to make sure incomes are sufficient to meet the rising cost of living.”

The findings come amid the Government’s pledge to “raise living standards in every part of the UK” and its focus on “making work pay” through measures such as the Employment Rights Bill – which promises to improve job security, sick pay, and access to flexible working.

However, the report warns that paid employment alone is not enough to ensure a dignified standard of living for many households. Without action to increase incomes and reduce essential costs, many households will remain trapped below MIS.

The June 2025 Spending Review included £39bn for affordable and social housing in England between 2026–2036 and an expansion of Free School Meals to all children in households on Universal Credit from September 2026.

But the researchers caution that these measures will have a delayed impact and are unlikely to bridge the gap without further policies to boost incomes.

Professor Matt Padley, co-author and co-director of CRSP, said: “If the Government is serious about raising living standards, it needs to do much more to boost incomes and tackle rising costs.

“Without this, we’re going to see more and more people going without what the public agrees everyone needs to live in dignity. This is just not acceptable in 2025 and we need to see real action, not just words, from Government”

The report’s authors have called for urgent action, such as increasing the real value of working-age benefits; supporting wage growth beyond the NLW and reducing essential costs such as housing and childcare.

For the full report visit the Joseph Rowntree Foundation website.

ENDS

 

 

Notes for editors

Press release reference number: 25/127

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