THE BBC will end free TV licence fees for most over-75s from August 1, it has been confirmed.

The broadcaster previously postponed the axing of the universal entitlement for pensioners because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Means-testing was pushed back from June 1, with outgoing director-general Lord Tony Hall saying it was not the right time to introduce it in “the middle of a crisis”.

But the corporation has now said the new scheme will begin at the start of next month.

READ MORE: BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg accused of ‘repeating mistakes of 2014’

BBC chairman Sir David Clementi said: “The decision to commence the new scheme in August has not been easy but the BBC could not continue delaying the scheme without impacting on programmes and services.

“Around 1.5 million households could get free TV licences if someone is over 75 and receives Pension Credit and 450,000 of them have already applied. Critically, it is not the BBC making that judgment about poverty. It is the Government who sets and controls that measure.

“I believe continuing to fund some free TV licences is the fairest decision for the public, as we will be supporting the poorest, oldest pensioners without impacting the programmes and services that all audiences love.”

The broadcaster has been urged by charities such as Age UK to scrap the decision to end the universal benefit.

The charity called on the “BBC and the Government to sit down and agree a way forward”, saying that pensioners relied on their free TV licence more than ever as their main source of news and information about Covid-19 in lockdown.

The free TV licence was introduced in 2000 but the BBC agreed to take on responsibility for funding the scheme as part of the charter agreement hammered out in 2015. The broadcaster, which faces increased competition from streaming giants, has said it cannot afford to take on the cost from the Government.

Continuing with the Government scheme would have cost the corporation £745 million, the BBC said, meaning the closures of BBC Two, BBC Four, the BBC News Channel, the BBC Scotland channel, Radio 5 Live and a number of local radio stations, as well as other cuts and reductions.

The decision comes as the Government is set to announce its response to a consultation on decriminalising licence-fee evasion.

A report in May suggested that hundreds of people had opted to cancel their TV licence each day over the past five months.