Redress scheme for families of Post Office victims announced

Katie Burrows (left) and Rebekah Foot from Lost Chances

The government has today announced a new compensation scheme for families of those affected by the Post Office scandal. It looks to have support from at least one victims’ group and the Horizon Compensation Advisory Board, an independent body which has done quite a bit to shape government thinking about this scandal.

The scheme is called the Horizon Family Members Redress Scheme, and it is, according to the government “expected to open in summer 2026”.

The Business Department says the scheme is “designed to be as accessible and straightforward as possible – minimising bureaucratic barriers so that families receive redress without delay.”

Lost Chances, a group formed by children of Subpostmasters affected by the scandal, have, according to the government “been involved in the design of the scheme alongside other postmasters and interested groups”. Some members of Lost Chances are meeting the Post Office minister, Blair McDougall today. McDougall says:

“Today’s scheme recognises that harm and will make sure those families receive the support they deserve, as quickly and simply as possible. We have listened carefully to those affected and designed this scheme to reach as many people as we can without putting unnecessary barriers in their way.”

Katie Burrows, vice Chair of Lost Chances said: “We welcome the Government’s continued engagement and the collaborative approach that has been taken in developing these proposals…. For many children, the impact of the Horizon scandal went far beyond financial loss – it affected their upbringing, family stability, mental health, and life opportunities. It is right that this is now being formally recognised. At the same time, the success of this scheme will depend on whether that recognition feels meaningful to those affected. Getting this right is essential not only for fairness, but for building trust in the process among families who have often felt overlooked for many years.”

Sarah Freebury is a member of Lost Chances. Her mother was prosecuted by the Department for Work and Pensions over discrepancies generated by Horizon and was sent to prison. Sarah said: “While no scheme can ever fully undo the harm, we hope it delivers redress and support in a way that is fair, swift, and respectful. Independent parties must be appointed to maintain a neutral standpoint throughout the process. I’m saddened to see that DWP prosecution aren’t eligible, however we continue to press the agencies involved to review the remaining 100 or so DWP cases so that ALL affected families can access this pathway and the recognition they truly deserve.”

Two routes

The scheme apparently offers “two routes to redress”. Family members who can provide “contemporaneous evidence of personal injury”, or who have an “ongoing medical condition arising from Horizon”, can make an assessed personal injury claim.  

The government says “for those who cannot provide this level of evidence, a new events-based route has been created. Where a postmaster relative experienced one of the most serious consequences of the scandal – such as criminal prosecution or bankruptcy – the Government will offer fixed rate recognition payments without requiring further evidence of personal harm. This approach ensures that family members are not left without any recourse simply because records decades ago are no longer available.”

Raj supporting his mother Jasvinder when she spoke at the Houses of Parliament in Dec last year

There are more details about the scheme in two letters posted to the government website, one of which sets out some potential settlement sums. Raj Barang, whose 39 year old father died from a suspected stress-related condition six weeks after being suspended by the Post Office has already had a look. He said:

“They are suggesting a compensation payment of £15,120 for wrongful death. That should just be an interim. That shouldn’t be a full settlement. They’ve put a very small figure on the death of my father.”

Raj’s mum Jasvinder took over Lower Stondon Post Office in Bedfordshire after her husband died. From the age of 16 Raj was helping support the family. Eight years later Jasvinder was prosecuted by the Post Office. Her conviction was quashed in 2020. Raj is understandably bitter about the way his family was treated. “It’s good to see that it’s going in the right direction, but this should have been done a long time ago. I feel like – how long are they going to make us wait now? Why are we waiting till summer for the application process to open?”

Both routes to redress appear to set a high bar for potential claimants. As ever, the proof of the pudding will be in the eating. The Post Office and government’s track record in compensation schemes has so far not been great (see last week’s Business select committee report).

It is significant that Lord Arbuthnot, who has campaigned on behalf of Subpostmasters since 2010, is behind the new scheme. He said, in a quote embedded in the government press release:

“The Horizon Compensation Advisory Board has helped to shape the scheme’s design and will continue to monitor closely the development of the scheme and to provide its experience and expertise where helpful. Whilst the wrongs of the Horizon scandal cannot be undone, this scheme will help to give family members the recognition that they deserve.”

Varchas Patel outside the former Post Office in Horspath

Varchas Patel, whose father Vipin ran Horspath Post Office in Oxfordshire before being sacked and prosecuted in 2011, said:

“The announcement of compensation for immediate family members is welcome, and I want to express my appreciation to Lost Chances for their consistent input in getting us to this point. They truly deserve recognition for their work. However, I am concerned about the issue of legal advice, as every other redress scheme has included a cap. The cost of my intensive therapy – which has kept me alive and is essential for my ongoing mental health recovery – will soon approach six figures. I have financially supported my parents since 2015 to prevent them from going bankrupt, and I have lived in my overdraft for roughly the same period… Given how my father and hundreds of other sub‑postmasters have been treated, I sadly have no confidence that proper offers will be made, even when evidence is overwhelming – a pattern we have already seen across different redress schemes. In many ways, I feel I would be better off taking my chances in court.”

Restorative Justice League is go

The new Horizon redress scheme has been announced alongside the publication of a report by the Restorative Justice Council, building on its work towards the end of last year. This report is “the first full design for an independent restorative justice programme responding to the Post Office Horizon IT scandal, shaped directly by postmasters, their children, and families.”

Funded by the government, Post Office and Fujitsu, “Rebuilding Trust: Designing a Restorative Justice Programme with Those Harmed… sets out how extensive listening to those affected has informed a national programme that will begin operating from April 2026″.

Jim Simon, the Chief Executive of the Restorative Justice Council, said: “This report marks a shift from listening to action… Postmasters, their children and families have been clear that the harm they experienced… shaped family life, childhoods, reputations and trust in ways that continue today. Restorative justice cannot undo what happened, and it cannot replace legal or redress processes. What it can do is create safe, voluntary spaces for truth telling, responsibility and dignity, on people’s own terms, without causing further harm.”


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12 responses to “Redress scheme for families of Post Office victims announced”

  1. This is just another example of the Post Office and the Government trying to escape being answerable in a meaningful way and for Fujitsu to avoid everything.

    It will be an offer to make claimants not claim actually what they are entitled to. It will be (relatively) quick and dirty: we’ll give you something (but we’ll decide what) and you go away and don’t come back. I’m pretty sure there will be a confidentiality agreement as well.

  2. Ayesha Mistry-Black avatar
    Ayesha Mistry-Black

    I am absolutely delighted that families who suffered under the Horizon scheme are now been recognised. I am very disappointed however that the DBT have hit rolled out a similar scheme for victims who fell under the Capture system. Please don’t leave us behind yet again. It took them seven years after acknowledging horrors of what happened under the Horizon system to acknowledge that there were also victims under the Capture system.

    My father was a Post Master and suffered very high “shortfalls” under the Capture Scheme system, to the tune of about £21,000 over a period of 3 years. The consequences were severe and he was interviewed for prosecution by the PO. As he managed to scrape together almost half of the money he allegedly owed he was not convicted. He was however forced to sell our home and business at a great loss, was in large debt and had his name tarnished and was left with nothing. I have 3 boxes of correspondence between him and the PO as well as all the original floppy discs and print outs. My solicitor has said he has only seen one other case like mine with as much evidence. To add injury to insult the PO maliciously placed a CCJ against my father so he was unable to obtain employment or be able to borrow.

    All in all, our suffering was no less than those under the Horizon system. When will the DBT treat us all as equals?

  3. All children and family members of sub postmaster Horizon victims deserve better compensation to care what was lost and have readdressed by positively in by funding better enabling to get out of debts
    Negativity out feeling better with compassion compensation paid better

  4. Chantal Brabec avatar

    No doubt yet another empty promise of action. Stack them all up and they occupy decades and achieve little or nothing. Certainly not justice for victims. DELAY is THE name of the game. What a nice little earner it is, too, as it’s all being dragged out at snail’s pace. Delay for long enough and everyone who deserved compensation has “somehow” died. Ohdearwhatashamenevermind. Post Office Scandal, Infected Blood Scandal, Hillsborough Disaster etc. etc. etc. Lots of wealthy parasites created, lots of penniless victims ignored.

    1. not to mention grooming gang scandal etc etc…..yes I laughed when it was reported ‘without delay’ mmm….that will be a first then……………………..oh except hang on……………. it’s been delayed for years already. Those poor families still suffering from lack of due diligence and appalling delivery of justice in a system now not fit for purpose

  5. While government falls over itself to shower those arriving by boat with nothing to offer, no papers and no respect for our way of life with free everything including legal protection exceeding that available to legal, hard-working citizens, they clearly are determined to drag out and minimise the compensation for what I regard as the most heinous scandal in my long lifetime. Government knew exactly what was going on, as the shareholder, and is ultimately responsible for the ruination, imprisonment and the deaths of innocent postmasters which the callous Post Office leaders brought about. In my view, any postmaster accused of theft where such cannot be proven and who is fired but later had the accusation quoshed, should be awarded half a million pounds, especially where he/she was interrogated without legal representation and persuaded to “go quietly”. Compare the cost of that to what has been wasted on Net Zero and illegal immigration and the amount is tiny. The failure to pay out adequately and quickly was both grotesque and deliberate. The scandal goes on.

    1. I don’t think it is correct to say that boat arrivers are showered with government largesse. They have often travelled in extremely difficult and dangerous circumstances, and are then separated from families they have travelled with. They are given very poor quality housing in a prison-like environment with £10 a week and no access to any social benefits or work. As they will have paid a substantial amount for their journey, it can be assumed they are generally well paid hard working people, who will actually provide a great benefit to the UK, if they were given the chance.

  6. At last
    This should have happened 15 years ago

    I emailed 2 years ago ” it is the families who should given £500 k unconditionally immediately

    All those millions spent on the investigation was just a complete whitewash
    It should have started at the top, not the bottom!
    common sense has finally prevailed.
    It’s time we started getting those dishonest bosses into prison. And returning not just there titles but every unearned scandalous BONUSEs
    At least the latest and saddest news was this week
    Parmaf Kalia’s family should receive £1 million.
    We must remember it’s all our money and that all the governments have been owners of the post office
    The sad thing is that none of them know how to tell the truth
    The last 20 years of government are a disgrace. They all knew about this.

    I’d like to be the judge that decides how long PV and a Van B go to prison for.

  7. I remember reading about eight-year-old Milly Castleton being spat upon on the school bus because the vile Stephen Dilley, Ann Chambers and the frump in the god-awful dress (Helen Rose) bamboozled a Judge into finding against her innocent father, thereby labelling him a thief. A justice system that relies on deep pockets can only be described as unjust and not fit for its purpose.

  8. Whilst this scheme is welcome. We must understand it is the tax payers money being used to redress these wrongs.
    I for one of many of the tax payers would like to see those responsible in allowing this huge injustice to be held to account both in court and in public. Never to allowed to hold positions that could allow them this level of authority. Be it, the Politicians, the board members, Senior Management, the legal teams. Also those within the Fugitsu organisation that knowing avoided telling the FULL TRUE of what was going on behind the scenes for decades. Without those in power and control being held responsible and sanctioned, future LEADERS & LEGAL ADVISORS. MAYWELL REPEAT level of total responsible which appears to be being repeated in other Organisations as I type. for example Water companies in Britain according to the channel 4 documentary “Dirty Business”. 🤔

    1. Perfect wording, thank you. As I type I am keeping a very close watch on the CEO of Southern Water – who now has a bodyguard when he goes out and about!

  9. On March 18, 2026, in Britain, another exemplary individual fell victim to the oppressive forces of the British Establishment. This person, like countless others, bravely chose to stand up for the values instilled in us during childhood: the importance of honouring the truth and living a life guided by integrity. Sadly, these principles seem increasingly disregarded by many Western nations and their institutions.

    I would like to draw your attention to my heartfelt tribute to Ruth Durasnt Durant, available at https://shorturl.at/v05xJ. This tribute is shared on behalf of the Australian Casualties of Telstra (COT) group. Those of us who remain will understand the critical need to support individuals who, like Parmod, strive to lead honest and principled lives.

    This tribute will remain on our Australian website homepage, https://www.absentjustice.com/, and on promoteyourstory.com.au for all of this month.

    As a united voice from our COT group, we extend our deepest condolences. I encourage you to take a moment to read my message to Durant Durant, as it sheds light on the values we hold dear and the importance of standing up for the truth.

    Alan Bates vs British Post Office

    After almost two decades, the British public—and a growing number of British politicians—have insisted that the British Post Office scandal is a matter of profound public interest and must no longer be concealed by the government, the civil service, or the Establishment.

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