BBC licence fee update for pensioners as petition for free access nears 40,000 signatures amid £180 fee

'National SHAME' BBC sparks FURY with 'OMINOUS' TV licence scheme as Brits 'living in fear'

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GB NEWS

Joe Sledge

By Joe Sledge


Published: 12/06/2026

- 20:28

Ministers say they are considering options for future support as campaigners push for free TV licences for all pensioners

Labour has signalled it remains open to introducing new TV licence concessions for pensioners as a growing campaign for free licences gathers momentum across the UK.

A petition calling for all pensioners to receive a state-funded TV licence has attracted close to 40,000 signatures, placing it nearly halfway towards the 100,000 threshold required to trigger consideration for a debate in Parliament.


The Department for Culture, Media and Sport, led by Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy, has now issued a fresh statement indicating ministers are keeping an "open mind" on potential changes to the current system.

Campaigners have until July 21 to add their names to the petition before it closes.

If the petition reaches 100,000 signatures, the issue could be considered for a Parliamentary debate, requiring ministers to publicly set out and defend the Government's position.

The campaign centres on calls for all pensioners who have reached state pension age to receive a free TV licence funded by the state.

At present, a standard TV licence costs £180 per year and remains the primary source of funding for the BBC's television, radio and digital services.

The licence fee supports services including BBC iPlayer, BBC Sounds, the World Service and the broadcaster's network of national and local radio stations.

According to the BBC's 2024/25 annual report, licence fee income generated £3.8billion during the year.

BBC

Labour open to new TV licence concessions as pensioner petition nears 40,000 signatures

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GETTY

The corporation reported that 23.8 million TV licences were in force across the UK during the same period.

In its latest statement, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport highlighted the concessions already available under existing legislation.

A 50 per cent discount is available for those who are registered blind or severely sight impaired.

Lisa Nandy

People aged 75 and over who receive Pension Credit are entitled to a free TV licence

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GETTY

Meanwhile, residents of qualifying residential care settings who are disabled or aged 60 and above can obtain a TV licence for £7.50 per year.

The Department said: "The Government is committed to the current licence fee and its available concessions for the remainder of this Charter period, until the end of 2027."

However, officials also indicated that future reforms remain under consideration.

The Department added it was "considering a range of options to better account for different household situations."

Government documents published as part of the Charter Review Green Paper state that no existing TV licence concessions will be removed.

However, ministers have also made clear they do not intend to revisit the previous decision regarding universal free licences for all over-75s.

Supporters of the petition argue that many pensioners continue to face significant financial pressures.

The petition states: "Many pensioners live on the breadline with only the TV for company. With the cost of food soaring and utility bills ever higher, we feel there is a desperate need to provide all pensioners with at least this concession."

Universal free TV licences for the UK's 3.7 million over-75s ended on July 31, 2020.

At the time, the BBC argued that continuing to fund the concession would have resulted in "unprecedented closures" across its services.

Before the policy changed, the annual cost of providing free licences to all over-75s was estimated at around £745million.

Ms Nandy has previously suggested she could be open to reforms that move away from the current flat-fee model.

The Culture Secretary has criticised the existing structure on the basis that "poorer people pay proportionately more than anybody else."

While ministers have not announced any immediate changes, the growing support for the petition is likely to keep pressure on the Government as it considers the future of TV licence funding beyond the current BBC Charter period.