UK Government Advances AI Chatbot Trials to Support Welfare Claimants
Department for Work and Pensions explores conversational AI to help Universal Credit users navigate benefits and reduce pressure on human advisors
Britain’s Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has begun testing advanced artificial intelligence-powered chatbots designed to assist Universal Credit claimants and other welfare recipients as part of a broader effort to modernise public services.
Officials told Parliament that these AI systems could eventually be integrated into frontline support to help people understand entitlements, navigate complex applications, access employment and training information, and deflect routine queries that today occupy stretched work coaches and call centres.
Early advocates within the DWP argue that digital assistants could free up trained staff to focus on claimants with the most complex needs, improve responsiveness, and make the benefits system easier to use for the millions of citizens it serves each year.
The exploration of AI support tools aligns with the government’s wider programmes to embed artificial intelligence across public services, including experimental chatbots being rolled out on the central GOV.UK platform to help users find official guidance more easily.
Over time, ministers and senior civil servants hope these systems will deliver more personalised and accessible guidance for people engaging with bureaucracy, while also enhancing departmental productivity and saving taxpayer resources compared to traditional support channels.
Permanent Secretary Sir Peter Schofield told lawmakers that the department is engaging with industry partners to develop and refine these AI assistants, emphasising their potential to support claimants during periods of economic and labour market change.
The DWP’s plans form part of a long-term approach to harness automation and generative AI in public service delivery, continuing trials and gathering evidence on effectiveness, safety and user experience.
At the same time, independent research groups have highlighted broader questions about the accuracy and reliability of AI systems in answering queries on government services and public information, underscoring the importance of rigorous testing and safeguards as these technologies evolve.
The government continues to pilot and evaluate these tools ahead of any scaled deployment across welfare and other citizen-facing services.