Free School Meals: The Earnings Cap Goes in September
For years a family could be on Universal Credit, working, and still be told their child did not qualify for a free school meal — because their earnings sat above £7,400 a year. From the start of the 2026/27 school year in England, that line disappears for the meal itself. Every child in a Universal Credit household qualifies.
Two things about that sentence get misread. The change begins in September, not today. And eligibility becoming automatic is not the same as the meal becoming automatic: somebody still has to make a claim, and nobody will make it for you.
Checkpoints
- From September 2026, any child in a household on Universal Credit qualifies for the free meal.
- You must apply. Being on Universal Credit does not enrol your child.
- The £7,400 line does not vanish — it still decides whether the school receives pupil premium funding.
- Transitional protection ends at the same time, so eligibility now depends on still meeting the criteria.
1 Know which rule applies to your child, and when
Right now, for the school year that is ending, the old rule still stands: Universal Credit plus household earnings of £7,400 a year or less, after tax and excluding benefits. From the start of the 2026/27 year, the earnings test goes and Universal Credit alone is enough.
That puts a parent reading this in July squarely in the gap. If your family is on Universal Credit, your child qualifies from September — which means the sensible thing is to apply over the summer, so the meal is in place on the first day back rather than three weeks into term.

2 Apply, even if you think you are already covered
The claim goes to your local council, or through your child’s school, which passes it on. Start at the GOV.UK apply page, enter your postcode, and it routes you to the right council. Have your National Insurance number ready, along with your child’s name, date of birth and school. The council runs an eligibility check against Universal Credit records, and a confirmed check lasts the whole academic year.
The group that most often skips this step: parents of children in Reception, Year 1 and Year 2. Those children already eat a free lunch under universal infant free school meals, which arrives automatically with no income test. It is a different thing. It does not register the child for benefits-based free school meals, and that registration is what unlocks holiday food and activity places — and, for lower-earning families, funding for the school.

3 Understand what the £7,400 line still decides
The cap is removed for the meal. It is not removed from the funding system. Families on Universal Credit earning at or below £7,400 fall into what the Department calls targeted free school meals, and their school receives pupil premium for that child. Families above the line receive the meal only, and the school receives nothing extra.
This matters when you read advice telling you that registering always brings your school over a thousand pounds. It does not — only registration under the targeted line does. The meal is worth having either way, and for a child below the line, registering is worth considerably more than the lunch.
| Your household | Free meal | Pupil premium for the school |
|---|---|---|
| On Universal Credit, earning £7,400 or less | Yes | Yes |
| On Universal Credit, earning above £7,400 | Yes, from September 2026 | No |
| Not on Universal Credit or a qualifying legacy benefit | No | No |
4 Common mistakes, and how to avoid them
Mistake 1
Reading “automatic eligibility” as “automatic meal”. You still have to apply, to your council or through the school.
Mistake 2
Assuming an infant in Reception is already registered. A universal infant meal is not benefits-based free school meals, and the difference blocks holiday food places.
Mistake 3
Believing that once eligible, always eligible. Transitional protection ends alongside the new entitlement — your family has to keep meeting the criteria.
Do this today
Apply this month rather than in September. Enter your postcode on GOV.UK, and it takes you to your own council’s form — you will need your National Insurance number and your child’s school.
FAQ Frequently asked questions
I am on Universal Credit and earn £30,000. Does my child qualify?
From September 2026, yes, for the meal — the earnings cap is removed. You still have to apply. And because your earnings are above £7,400, your child’s school will not receive pupil premium for them.
My child is in Reception and already gets a free lunch. Do I need to do anything?
If you are on Universal Credit, yes. Apply for benefits-based free school meals as well. The infant lunch is automatic but it does not register your child, and that registration is what unlocks holiday activity and food places.
We live in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland. Does this change apply?
No. This is an England-only change. Each nation runs its own free school meals scheme with different criteria and a different application route.
Key takeaways
- From September 2026 in England, Universal Credit alone qualifies a child for a free school meal.
- Eligibility is automatic; the meal is not. Apply through your council or your child’s school.
- The £7,400 line survives, deciding whether the school gets pupil premium.
- A universal infant lunch is not the same as being registered. Register anyway.