Free UK Pension Calculator🇬🇧 United Kingdom • 2025/26 Tax Year

Estimate your workplace pension pot at retirement including employer contributions, tax relief, and investment growth. See how increasing contributions compounds over time.

Calculate Your Pension

Projected Pension Pot
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Total Contributions
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Investment Growth
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Annual Income (4% drawdown)
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State Pension (2025/26)

Full new State Pension: £230.25/week (£11,973/year). This is in addition to your workplace pension. You need 35 qualifying NI years for the full amount.

Pension Breakdown

Year-by-Year Growth

Detailed Projection

AgeSalaryYour Contrib.Employer Contrib.GrowthPot Value

UK Workplace Pension Explained

Since 2012, UK employers must automatically enrol eligible workers into a workplace pension scheme. Minimum contributions on qualifying earnings (£6,240–£50,270) are:

ContributorMinimum Rate
Employee5% (including tax relief)
Employer3%
Total Minimum8%

Many employers offer more generous schemes. Contributing above the minimum is one of the most tax-efficient ways to save for retirement.

Pension Tax Relief 2025/26

Pension contributions receive tax relief, effectively giving you “free money” from the government:

Tax BandRelief Rate£100 Costs You
Basic Rate (20%)20%£80
Higher Rate (40%)40%£60
Additional Rate (45%)45%£55

Annual Allowance: £60,000 (or 100% of earnings if less). Unused allowance can be carried forward for up to 3 years.

At retirement: You can take 25% of your pot tax-free (the “pension commencement lump sum”), capped at £268,275.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Auto-enrolment requires UK employers to automatically enrol eligible workers (aged 22+, earning over £10,000) into a workplace pension. You can opt out but lose employer contributions. Minimum total contribution is 8% of qualifying earnings.
Currently from age 55 (rising to 57 in April 2028). You can take 25% tax-free, then either buy an annuity or use drawdown. State Pension age is currently 66, rising to 67 by 2028 and 68 by 2046.
The 4% rule suggests you can withdraw 4% of your pension pot each year in retirement while preserving the capital over 30+ years. A £500,000 pot would give £20,000/year. This is a guideline — actual sustainable withdrawal rates depend on market conditions and investment mix.
If your employer matches extra contributions, absolutely — it's free money. Even without matching, pension contributions are one of the most tax-efficient savings vehicles. Contributing 12-15% of salary (including employer) is a common target for a comfortable retirement.
A SIPP (Self-Invested Personal Pension) offers more investment choice and control. But always contribute enough to your workplace scheme to get the full employer match first. Many people do both — workplace for employer match, then SIPP for additional tax-relieved savings.