The Labour Government faces accusations of effectively "decriminalising" benefit fraud following a dramatic collapse in prosecutions since 2017.
Figures obtained by The Telegraph reveal that criminal proceedings against suspected fraudsters have plummeted by more than 90 per cent, falling from over 4,400 cases to just 385 last year.
Convictions have suffered an even steeper decline of 94 per cent during the same period. Only 461 individuals were found guilty of benefits fraud last year, compared with nearly 8,000 in 2017.
The sentencing figures paint an equally stark picture, with just 283 people receiving punishment for their crimes, down from approximately 4,000.
New data suggests benefit fraud is being 'decriminialised' under Labour
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This enforcement collapse comes as benefit fraud drains £6.5billion annually from public coffers, with fraudulent claims now accounting for 2.2 per cent of all payouts, more than double pre-pandemic levels.
Andy Burnham, who is set to take over at Downing Street following Sir Keir Starmer's resignation this week, will immediately confront mounting pressure to address the ballooning welfare budget.
Analysis from the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) projects the benefits bill will reach £333billion this year.
A significant driver behind this surge has been the dramatic rise in long-term sickness claims, with disability benefits now supporting more than four million people.


Since Labour assumed power in 2024, fewer than 600 people in total have been convicted of benefit fraud.
Although the downward trend in prosecutions began under the previous Conservative government, critics argue Labour has failed to address the issue, effectively signalling to fraudsters that they face no consequences for their actions.
Shimeon Lee, a policy analyst at the TaxPayers' Alliance, said taxpayers would be "appalled to see ministers going soft and effectively decriminalising benefit fraud".
He added: "With the welfare bill ballooning and hard-working Brits struggling under a record tax burden, benefit cheats deserve more than a slap on the wrist. The new prime minister must immediately crack down on welfare fraudsters and recoup any money stolen from taxpayers."

Sir Iain Duncan-Smith, the former work and pensions minister who designed Universal Credit, called for authorities to make examples of fraudsters through the courts.
He said: "They should be keeping up with individual prosecutions to send a message to the public that fraudsters will be caught."
Rather than pursuing criminal charges that could result in prison sentences of up to a decade, authorities have increasingly opted for out-of-court settlements to reduce pressure on the judicial system and cut costs.
Under these arrangements, suspected fraudsters can accept financial penalties worth half of what they allegedly claimed illegally, capped at £5,000, without admitting guilt.
The Government maintains this represents a more proportionate approach, with criminal proceedings now reserved primarily for major fraud operations typically run by organised criminal networks.
A Government spokesman insisted that "benefit fraud will not be tolerated", pointing to a Targeted Case Review that has examined over 1.1 million claims and debt recovery teams recouping a record £3.1billion in 2024-25.

By GB News (Politics) | Created at 2026-06-24 17:01:30 | Updated at 2026-06-24 18:04:59
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