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UK Govt Has Increased Benefit Payments for Husbands With 2 Or More Wives

husband with more than two wives

Britain’s Department for work and pensions (DWP) has increased the payment for husbands with more than one wife..

Yes, the Government quietly confirmed that as of April 2026 it had increased the amount payable for “additional spouses” in recognized polygamous households from £119.50 to £125.25 per week.

While bigamy is illegal in the UK, there are circumstances in which people who are married to a husband with more than one wife (and vice versa) can claim an additional benefits allowance, and it’s all fully legal.

Marriages that were legally entered into overseas can still be recognized in the UK for certain legacy benefits.

And politicians act shocked when trust in government keeps collapsing….

The Daily Express reports: Those who are classed as an ‘additional spouse’ in a polygamous marriage and are above state pension age were in 2025-26 able to claim an additional £119.50 per week of Pension Credit or Housing Benefit, with no given limit on the number of separate additional spouses who can claim in one household, other than the overall benefits cap per household per year.

From April 2026, this has been increased to £125.25 per week per additional spouse, a 4.8% increase in line with wage growth, which is how Pension Credit is automatically increased each spring, which is another £5.75 per week, or £299 extra per year.

The money is less than that person would be able to claim if they lived alone (£238 from April 2026), but is still extra money for a three-person household’s income compared to a two-person marriage.

The rule is not new, but the amount given to second wives is still being increased each year.

Although bigamy is illegal in the UK, the act of marrying more than one person at a time – polygamy – is not illegal if the marriages took place overseas.

This is legal where a person has married multiple wives (or husbands) overseas while legally living in a country where this is legally allowed, and then moved to the UK legally afterwards.

In that circumstance, a person now legally living in the UK, who legally married more than one spouse while living overseas, can then see their second, third, and even fourth wife (or husband) all claim an additional £125.25 each per week, as long as that additional spouse came to the UK legally in their own right.

The DWP’s benefits and pension rates 2026 to 2027 document states: “If the claimant is a member of a polygamous marriage and all of the members of the marriage have attained pensionable age on or after 1 April 2021, for the claimant and the other party to the marriage [the allowance per week is now] £363.25.

“For each additional spouse who is a member of the same household as the claimant [the allowance per week is now] £125.25.”

It is understood the DWP believe the number of claimants to be small although it has not been able to provide a number for how many second or third wives do claim the benefit.

A House of Commons report titled Polygamy published in 2023 explains how this works.

It says: “To be recognised as legally valid, all marriages which take place in the United Kingdom must be monogamous and must be carried out in accordance with the requirements of the relevant legislation.

“For a polygamous marriage to be considered valid in the UK, the parties must be domiciled in a country where polygamous marriage is permitted and must have entered into the marriage in a country which permits polygamy.”

It continues: “It has been the policy of successive governments to prevent the formation of polygamous households in the UK.

“In short, a UK resident cannot sponsor a non-British/Irish national for permission to enter or remain in the UK as their spouse if another person has already been granted such permission, and the marriage has not been dissolved. These restrictions are set out in section 2 of the Immigration Act 1988 and paragraphs 278 – 280 of the Immigration Rules.

“However, it is possible for all parties to a polygamous marriage to be legally present in the UK. For example, a second spouse may qualify for entry to the UK in a different immigration category, in their own right.”

On qualification for benefits, it says: “For polygamous marriages considered valid in the UK, an award of certain means-tested benefits and tax credits can be for more than one spouse. Any additional amount payable for the second spouse is however likely to be less than the amount they could get were they to make a separate claim as a single person.

“Universal Credit (UC) is replacing means-tested benefits and tax credits for working age people. Polygamous marriages are not recognised in the UC rules. This means that some polygamous households will receive more under UC than they would have under the legacy benefits and tax credits system.”

In 2024, a question tabled by Conservative Life Peer Baroness Buscombe said: “[I would like] to ask His Majesty’s Government whether the benefits system continues to recognise polygamy in social security regulations and, if so, why.”

To which Conservative Viscount Younger of Leckie replied: “Polygamous marriages are illegal in the UK.

“Universal Credit does not recognise polygamous households in the benefit system. Any adults living in the household would each have to claim as a single person on the basis of their own circumstances.

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