Half a million more children in England will qualify for free school meals starting September 2026 C.E., the U.K. government has announced. The change removes the income ceiling for families receiving Universal Credit — meaning any household on the benefit will be eligible, regardless of earnings. Right now, parents must earn less than £7,400 a year after tax to qualify. That threshold has locked out hundreds of thousands of working families who earn just enough to be excluded but not nearly enough to cover the cost of lunch without real strain.
At a glance
- Free school meals expansion: Around 500,000 additional children will become newly eligible, bringing the total number of recipients in England to well over 2.7 million pupils.
- Income threshold change: The existing £7,400 annual earnings cap will be scrapped for Universal Credit households — a shift that covers working parents who previously earned too much to qualify but too little to pay comfortably.
- Child poverty impact: The Child Poverty Action Group estimates the new criteria will cover all children in poverty and those at risk, whereas the current system reaches only around two-thirds of them.
Why the old threshold left so many behind
England’s free school meals program has long operated on a binary: qualify fully, or pay in full. For families hovering just above the old income cap, that meant children arriving at school hungry while their parents earned too much to qualify for help but too little to absorb the cost without anxiety.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies has documented a consistent link between school meal access and better academic outcomes — improved attendance, stronger concentration, higher test scores. For younger children especially, the school meal is often the most nutritionally complete food they receive all day.
There’s also a stigma dimension that tends to get overlooked. When free meals go only to a visibly distinct group — students who pick up a different card or stand in a different line — children notice. Broadening eligibility makes participation feel ordinary rather than marked. That shift matters more than it might appear.
What the government has committed
The Department for Education has set aside £1 billion to fund the expansion through 2029 C.E. The government says the change will save eligible families around £500 per year and, over the longer term, lift approximately 100,000 children out of poverty.
Alongside the meals expansion, the government has pledged £13 million to a dozen food charities across England and committed to a review of nutritional standards for school meals. Free breakfast clubs — already announced — are part of the same broader push.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer described the expansion as a “down payment” on a wider child poverty strategy, with a fuller plan expected later in 2025 C.E. Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson put it plainly: “If you’re hungry, it’s really hard to concentrate.”
A model with proven international precedents
Universal or near-universal school meal programs have strong track records. Finland, Sweden, and India have each credited midday meal programs with measurable gains in school enrollment, retention, and health outcomes. England is not going universal — this expansion still targets low-income households — but the direction is clear.
Several U.S. states, including California and Colorado, have moved toward universal free school meals in recent years, and advocates on both sides of the Atlantic are watching each other’s approaches closely. The argument in both contexts is the same: means-testing carries administrative costs, creates gaps, and generates social costs that broader eligibility avoids.
Good News for Humankind has previously covered how U.K. cancer death rates have fallen to their lowest level on record — a reminder that sustained public investment in health and wellbeing compounds over time. The rapid growth of renewable energy globally reflects a similar pattern: policy commitments that look modest in the short term can reshape the landscape of what’s normal within a generation.
What still needs to happen
The expansion is a genuine step, but campaigners are clear that gaps remain. Children in secondary schools from similarly struggling families are not covered by this round of changes. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has noted that other measures — including lifting the two-child benefit cap, which restricts most families from claiming means-tested benefits for a third or subsequent child born after April 2017 C.E. — would lift more children out of poverty per pound spent.
Implementation will also require school kitchens and catering staff to scale up significantly, a logistical challenge that has complicated previous expansions. And not all eligible children are automatically enrolled — a gap that a cross-party parliamentary committee flagged in early 2025 C.E., calling for auto-enrollment to ensure no qualifying child is missed.
This policy is a support, not a solution to child poverty. The advocates who fought hardest for it are the first to say so. But reliable access to a meal during the school day is not a minor convenience. For half a million children, it is the difference between a morning spent learning and a morning spent waiting to feel full.
Read more
For more on this story, see: BBC News
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- U.K. cancer death rates drop to their lowest level on record
- Renewables now make up nearly half of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on child poverty
About this article
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