Metadata
Title
Minimum Income Standard
Category
general
UUID
608d421557934748817b7bd2397c5664
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/mis/
Parent URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:01:46+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Minimum Income Standard

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/mis/ Parent: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/

Defining a decent standard of living and helping more people to achieve it

The Minimum Income Standard (MIS) identifies the amount of money different types of households require to achieve a socially acceptable standard of living.

In 2018-19, 30% of the UK population (19.6 million people) were living below MIS – an increase of 3.4 million since 2008-9. There are variations across demographic groups, but a growing number of working households are below MIS.

For people living below MIS, it can be a struggle to cover the cost of essentials.

Our impact

The Real Living Wage

Assistance for low income households

Improved access to justice

Minimum Income Standard

This animation explains what the Minimum Income Standard is, how the research is done, and why it is useful both in the UK and in other countries.

The research

Our research to define MIS began in 2006, with first results published in 2008.

Since 2009, we have recalculated and updated MIS annually. This involves consultations with the public to determine the weekly budgets needed by different households to maintain an acceptable standard of living that supports participation in society.

This research is principally funded – and MIS endorsed – by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, but other organisations have supported specific studies around the cost of living, for example, in rural communities; for those with sight and hearing loss; and for children in foster families. Our work defining MIS for London is supported by Trust for London.

MIS now informs efforts to tackle low income in the UK. For example, it has demonstrated that the National Minimum Wage is too low for many households to reach a minimum acceptable standard of living – encouraging employers to adopt instead the Real Living Wage.

In addition, MIS is being piloted and adopted worldwide – in France, Ireland, Japan, Mexico, Portugal, Singapore, South Africa and Thailand – to explore ways to introduce policy and practice that will ensure a decent standard of living for people across a range of socio-economic situations.

The work of the Centre for Research in Social Policy on the Minimum Income Standard has been pivotal in getting a Living Wage established as a recognised standard across the UK, and its adoption by nearly 7,000 Living Wage employers.

Matthew Bolton Executive Director - Citizens UK

### 19.6 million people in the UK are living below MIS

### 68% of children with lone parents live below MIS

Research funders

Development partners

Over the years, we have worked with a range of partners, including

Meet the experts

Abigail Davis

Director of the Centre for Research in Social Policy

Matt Padley

Director of the Centre for Research in Social Policy