Early retirement - effect on your pension (2024)

If you retire early, or stop work due to redundancy, ill-health or other reasons, your State Pension and other pensions you're entitled to may be affected. You need to know all your pension options to make sure you'll have enough to live on in retirement.

Retirement age and claiming your pension

Although you can retire at any age, you can only claim your State Pension when you reach State Pension age.

For workplace or personal pensions, you need to check with each scheme provider the earliest age you can claim pension benefits. If you're retiring because of ill-health you may be able to take your benefits before the set age.

If you have serious ill-health and your life expectancy is less than a year you can retire at any age. You can take up to 100 per cent of your pension fund as a tax-free lump sum. If you're married or have a civil partner, up to 50 per cent of the pension fund may be retained by the scheme. This will be used to provide for a survivor's pension.

Changes to State Pension age

The State Pension age is increasing. To find out more read the following page:

Early retirement and State Pension

The earliest that you can get your State Pension is when you reach your State Pension age. You’ll have to wait to claim your state pension if you retire before you reach that age.

You may receive less when you reach State Pension age than if you'd continued working. This is because you get a State Pension by building up enough 'qualifying years'. A qualifying year is a tax year in which you have enough earnings on which you have paid National Insurance contributions (NICs). It also includes a year in which you are treated as having paid or have been credited with paying NICs. Find out more at the following nidirect pages.

Boosting your National Insurance contributions (NICs)

There are ways to improve your NICs record. You may be able to pay voluntary NICs. If you take on part-time or casual work and you pay NICs, this may add to your NICs record. Find out more on the following nidirect page.

Early retirement and personal or workplace pensions

Retiring early may also affect your personal or company pension. The rules for personal and company pensions vary, depending on who provides them. You will need to check your personal or company pension to see how early retirement might affect your situation.

When looking at workplace pensions, remember that:

  • your workplace scheme may not allow you to take your pension before the normal retirement age of the scheme
  • if you retire early through ill-health there may be special terms in the scheme rules that allow for the pension to be enhanced
  • if you're made redundant with a pension, you could delay drawing it and let it build up
  • if you are going to work again, check the rules about transferring your old pension to a new employer's pension scheme
  • if you've had several jobs, you'll need details of all your pension rights

These are complicated points and you may benefit from getting independent advice.

Defined contribution pension schemes

These are also known as ‘money purchase schemes’. If you're a member of a personal pension, stakeholder pension or workplace money purchase scheme, the main points to remember are that

  • you've had fewer years to pay in, so your pension fund will be smaller
  • your pension fund will need to provide you with an income over a longer period, so the pension you get will be smaller

If you're retiring early due to an illness that's likely to effect your life expectancy, then some providers may boost your pension.

Example

If you started paying into your pension at age 35 with a life expectancy of 85 then:

  • if you retire at 55 the fund built up over 20 years must last 30 years
  • if you retire at 65 the fund built up over 30 years must last 20 years

If you're retiring early due to an illness that's likely to affect your life expectancy, then some providers may boost your pension.

Defined benefit pension schemes

These are also known as ‘final salary’ schemes. With these schemes the pension you get when you retire is usually based on a fraction of your salary. This fraction is then multiplied by the number of years you were a member of the scheme. So if you're considering early retirement you'll probably receive a smaller pension.

Example 1

If you started paying into your pension at 35 and the pension is based on 1/80 of your final salary, then:

  • retiring at 55 would give 20/80 of final salary
  • retiring at 65 would give 30/80 of final salary

Many schemes also reduce the annual amount of pension they pay if you take payments before the scheme’s normal retirement age. This is to take account of the fact that your pension is being paid for a longer period.

Example 2

Michael is a member of a pension scheme that has a retirement age of 60. He retires at age 58 having built up a pension which is 35/80ths of his final salary. The pension scheme reduces the annual rate of pension by five per cent for each year if a pension is taken early. This means that Michael's pension will be reduced by 10 per cent because it is paid two years early.

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