This document discusses monetizing improvements in client health and wellbeing as an outcome of advice from Citizens Advice Bureaus (CAB). Baseline data found clients' problems severely affected their mood and mental health. Interviews revealed impacts like fatigue, stress, sleeplessness, and depression. Two methods captured wellbeing increases from CAB advice: the Warwick Edinburgh Mental Well Being Scale and individual self-reports of improvements in depression, anxiety, and physical health. Findings showed modest short-term and larger long-term increases in wellbeing scores. Potential monetary proxies included NHS savings from reduced GP visits or treatment for mental health issues attributed to CAB advice. Questions remained about fully capturing individual wellbeing changes and using alternative measurement tools.