One of the most frustrating things many disabled people and families experience is this:
They apply for Personal Independence Payment (PIP), are refused or awarded far too few points…
…and then later win at Mandatory Reconsideration or Tribunal.
For many people, this feels impossible to understand.
How can somebody go from:
- zero points
- “not eligible”
- or a very low award
to later receiving the correct entitlement after appeal?
And honestly, this is one of the biggest reasons so many disabled people feel exhausted by the system.
A Growing Concern
Recent reports and public discussions have highlighted concerns around the number of incorrect or overturned PIP decisions.
Many claimants describe:
- assessments that do not reflect what was actually said
- important evidence being ignored
- difficulties being minimised
- or reports that simply do not match daily reality
This is something families across the disability and SEND community have been talking about for years.
PIP Is Not About Diagnosis Alone
One of the biggest misunderstandings around PIP is this:
PIP is not awarded simply because somebody has:
- autism
- ADHD
- anxiety
- depression
- chronic illness
- or another diagnosis
Instead, PIP looks at how a condition affects:
- daily living
- mobility
- safety
- prompting needs
- supervision
- emotional regulation
- communication
- and the ability to function reliably day to day
This means two people with the same diagnosis may receive completely different awards depending on how their difficulties impact their lives.
Why So Many Claims Are Initially Refused
A huge number of people struggle because they unintentionally under-explain their difficulties.
Many disabled people are used to:
- masking
- minimising problems
- coping quietly
- or feeling guilty describing how difficult life actually is
During assessments, people often say things like:
- “I manage”
- “I can do it sometimes”
- “I try my best”
- “I force myself”
without fully explaining:
- the exhaustion afterwards
- the prompting required
- the safety risks
- the emotional distress
- or whether they can do tasks reliably and repeatedly
This matters enormously in PIP decisions.
Real-World Examples Matter
One of the most important parts of a strong PIP claim is using clear real-life examples.
Not just:
“I struggle with cooking.”
But:
- what actually happens
- what support is needed
- what risks occur
- how often difficulties happen
- what supervision or prompting is required
- and what the impact looks like day to day
For neurodivergent claimants especially, difficulties around:
- emotional regulation
- executive functioning
- sensory overwhelm
- anxiety
- routine
- fatigue
- communication
- and social interaction
can often be poorly understood if not explained clearly.
The Emotional Impact of Refusals
One of the hardest parts is the emotional damage these refusals cause.
Many people already struggle with:
- anxiety
- low confidence
- shame
- burnout
- or feeling misunderstood
Then they receive a decision letter essentially telling them:
“You are not disabled enough.”
That can be devastating.
Especially when people are already fighting just to survive daily life.
Tribunals Often Tell a Different Story
This is why so many people later succeed at:
- Mandatory Reconsideration
- or Tribunal stage
because additional evidence is considered more carefully, or the full impact of the condition is finally explained properly.
Many successful claims are initially refused.
That does not automatically mean the claimant was wrong.
The System Leaves Families Exhausted
The process itself can take:
- months
- sometimes years
- repeated forms
- evidence gathering
- reassessments
- appeals
- and enormous emotional energy
Families are often left:
- financially struggling
- mentally exhausted
- and constantly fighting to be believed
That pressure builds up over time.
Final Thought
Nobody should have to become an expert in benefit law simply to access support they may already qualify for.
But sadly, many disabled people feel they have no choice.
If you have been refused PIP or given a lower award than expected:
please understand that many legitimate claims are initially denied before later being overturned.
The first decision is not always the final or correct one.
And sometimes the biggest issue is not that somebody is “not disabled enough”…
but that the full reality of their daily life was never properly understood in the first place.
For more SEND support, DLA/PIP guidance and disability-related resources, visit AskEllie.co.uk
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