Sending your PIP claim form
This advice applies to Wales. See advice for See advice for England, See advice for Northern Ireland, See advice for Scotland
When you’ve finished filling in the ‘How your disability affects you’ form, you need to send it back to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) - or submit the online form if they sent you a link.
You must send back the same form the DWP sent you. You can’t get a copy of the form from an advice centre or print and send a version you found online.
If you’re not ready to send your form
If you’ve got your form, you can check how to:
If you haven’t got your form yet, check how to start your PIP claim.
If you’re terminally ill, the claim process is different and the DWP won’t send you the form. Check how to claim PIP if you're terminally ill.
Make a copy of your form
It’s a good idea to make a copy of your completed form. You can then take it with you to your assessment and use it to make sure that you don’t forget anything you want to mention at your assessment.
If you can’t copy, scan or print your form at home, you can ask at your local Citizens Advice or public library. You might have to pay a small charge.
Check how to send the form
If the DWP sent you a link to the online form by email, check the instructions they sent you about how to submit it.
If they sent you a form by post, the address to send it to will be on the back page of the form or the envelope it came with. If you can’t find it, call the phone number on the letter that came with the form.
When you post the form, ask the Post Office for free proof of postage - you might need to show when you sent it.
Sending your PIP form back on time
You should send the form back or submit the online form within 1 month of the date on the letter or email. You can ask the DWP for more time if you have a good reason.
If you don’t send or submit the form in time, the DWP will end your claim.
If you’re waiting for evidence to support your claim
You should send or submit the form on time even if you’re waiting for evidence - for example a hospital or doctor’s letter. Tell the DWP you’re waiting for evidence - you can either:
send them a letter with the form if you’re posting it
call the PIP enquiry line
Personal Independence Payment (PIP) enquiry line
Telephone: 0800 121 4433
Textphone: 0800 121 4493
Relay UK - if you can't hear or speak on the phone, you can type what you want to say: 18001 then 0800 121 4433
You can use Relay UK with an app or a textphone. There’s no extra charge to use it. Find out how to use Relay UK on the Relay UK website.
Video relay - if you use British Sign Language (BSL).
You can find out how to use video relay on YouTube.
Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm
Calls are free from mobiles and landlines.
If you send documents later, you can use our template letter to explain that you're sending evidence after your claim.
If you need to ask for more time to send the form
Ring the DWP as soon as possible and explain why you need extra time. If the 1 month time limit has passed, you can still ask for extra time - unless the DWP have sent you a letter that says they’ve ended your claim.
Personal Independence Payment (PIP) enquiry line
Telephone: 0800 121 4433
Textphone: 0800 121 4493
Relay UK - if you can't hear or speak on the phone, you can type what you want to say: 18001 then 0800 121 4433
You can use Relay UK with an app or a textphone. There’s no extra charge to use it. Find out how to use Relay UK on the Relay UK website.
Video relay - if you use British Sign Language (BSL).
You can find out how to use video relay on YouTube.
Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm
Calls are free from mobiles and landlines.
Explain why you can’t send or submit the form on time and why it's reasonable for you to be given more time. If the 1 month time limit has passed, explain why you couldn’t ask them earlier.
If you have a good reason for sending or submitting the form late, the DWP might agree a new deadline over the phone - this is called an ‘extension’.
If the DWP agrees to give you an extension, you should write to them and confirm they've told you this. You should include a copy of any evidence of the reason you needed the extension - for example a letter showing you're going into hospital for an operation.
To help you, use our template letter to confirm to the DWP that you have an extension.
When you’re ready to send or submit your form, you should include another copy of this letter and your evidence with your form. If you’re filling in the online form, put what you told the enquiry line in the ‘Additional information’ question on the form.
If the DWP don’t give you an extension, try to send or submit your PIP form on time if you can.
If the DWP ends your PIP claim
You should start a new claim as soon as possible. Check how to make a new PIP claim.
If there was a good reason why you couldn’t send or submit the original form on time, you can send it late and challenge the DWP’s decision to end your claim. You should start your challenge within 1 month of the letter that says they’ve ended your claim. Check how to challenge a PIP decision.
It’s still worth making a new claim at the same time as challenging the decision. This means you’ll be assessed for PIP even if your challenge doesn’t succeed.
Check what happens after you’ve sent the form
You’ll usually have to go to an assessment to check how your condition affects you. The DWP will write to you to tell you when the assessment will be. Check how to prepare for the PIP assessment.
The DWP might take a long time before they write to you. If you’re worried, you can call the PIP enquiry line to check they’ve got your form.
Personal Independence Payment (PIP) enquiry line
Telephone: 0800 121 4433
Textphone: 0800 121 4493
Relay UK - if you can't hear or speak on the phone, you can type what you want to say: 18001 then 0800 121 4433
You can use Relay UK with an app or a textphone. There’s no extra charge to use it. Find out how to use Relay UK on the Relay UK website.
Video relay - if you use British Sign Language (BSL).
You can find out how to use video relay on YouTube.
Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm
Calls are free from mobiles and landlines.
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Page last reviewed on 17 February 2022