Financial Planning for Over 60s UK — Complete Guide
Money management guide for over 60s covering State Pension, retirement income, tax, benefits, downsizing, and estate planning. UK guide for 2026.
·5 min read
Your 60s bring important financial decisions — from accessing pensions and planning retirement income to estate planning and benefit entitlements. Here is a practical guide to managing your money in this life stage.
Retirement Income Sources
Source
Typical amount
When available
State Pension (full)
~£230/week (£11,960/year)
State Pension age (currently 66, rising to 67 by 2028)
Workplace pension
Varies — average £6,000–£15,000/year
Usually from 55 (57 from 2028)
Private pension (SIPP)
Depends on pot size
From 55 (57 from 2028)
ISA savings
Tax-free withdrawals
Any time
Downsizing/equity release
Lump sum
Any time
Part-time work
Varies
Any time
Rental income
Varies
Any time
State Pension
Detail
Information
Full new State Pension
~£230/week from April 2026
Qualifying years needed
35 for full amount, 10 minimum
State Pension age
Currently 66, rising to 67 (2026–2028)
Can you defer
Yes — pension increases by ~5.8% for each year deferred
Taxable
Yes — but paid gross (tax collected via other income)
How to check
gov.uk/check-state-pension
Filling Gaps in Your NI Record
Situation
Action
Less than 35 qualifying years
You may be able to buy voluntary NI contributions (Class 3)
Cost per year
~£900 for a full year (2025/26 rate)
Worth it?
Each year adds ~£330/year to your State Pension — payback in under 3 years
Deadline
Currently extended deadline to fill gaps back to 2006 — check gov.uk for current cut-off
This is one of the best financial returns available — check your forecast and consider filling gaps.
Pension Access Options
Option
How it works
Tax treatment
25% tax-free lump sum
Take 25% as cash, keep rest invested
Tax-free
Flexible drawdown
Take income as needed from remaining 75%
Taxed as income
Annuity
Buy guaranteed income for life
Taxed as income
UFPLS (Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum)
Take lump sums with 25% tax-free and 75% taxable each time
Mixed
Leave pension untouched
Let it grow — useful if you don’t need it yet
No tax until withdrawn
Drawdown vs Annuity
Feature
Drawdown
Annuity
Income guaranteed
No — depends on investments
Yes — for life
Flexibility
High — withdraw what you need
Low — fixed once purchased
Investment risk
You bear it
Insurance company bears it
Inheritance
Remaining pot passes to beneficiaries
Usually dies with you (unless joint/guaranteed)
Best for
Those comfortable with investment risk
Those wanting certainty
Can be combined
Yes — use annuity for essential costs, drawdown for extras
Tax in Retirement
Income source
Taxable?
Tax-free element
State Pension
Yes
None — but uses Personal Allowance (£12,570)
Private/workplace pension withdrawals
Yes (75%)
25% tax-free lump sum
ISA withdrawals
No
Entirely tax-free
Savings interest
Yes (subject to PSA)
£1,000 PSA at basic rate, £500 at higher rate
Rental income
Yes
£1,000 property allowance
Dividends
Yes (above £500 allowance)
£500 dividend allowance
Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Order
Priority
Source
Why
1
State Pension
You receive this automatically — no choice
2
ISA withdrawals
Tax-free — use to supplement State Pension
3
Pension (within basic rate band)
Tax at 20% on 75% of withdrawals
4
Other savings/investments
Use PSA and allowances
Drawing from ISAs before pensions (beyond what you need) preserves the pension pot, which benefits from IHT advantages on death.
Benefits for Over 60s
Benefit
Eligibility
Amount
Pension Credit
State Pension age, weekly income below ~£218 (single) or ~£333 (couple)
Tops up income to the threshold
Attendance Allowance
State Pension age, need help with personal care or supervision
£72.65 or £108.55/week
Council Tax Reduction
Low income
Up to 100% off council tax
Winter Fuel Payment
State Pension age, receiving Pension Credit
£100–£300
Free prescriptions
Age 60+
Automatic (show birth date)
Free bus pass
State Pension age (England) or 60 (Scotland, Wales)
Unlimited off-peak travel
TV licence discount
Age 75+ receiving Pension Credit
Free
Disabled Facilities Grant
Any age, need adaptations to home
Up to £30,000 (England)
Pension Credit is a gateway benefit — applying unlocks Winter Fuel Payment, free TV licence (75+), full Council Tax Reduction, and other support.
Downsizing Your Home
Cost of moving
Typical amount
Estate agent fees (1–2.5%)
£3,000–£10,000
Solicitor/conveyancing
£1,000–£2,500
Stamp duty on new property
£0–£10,000+
Removals
£500–£2,000
Repairs/improvements to sell
£1,000–£5,000
Total moving costs
£5,500–£30,000
Should You Downsize?
Pros
Cons
Release significant equity
High transaction costs
Lower running costs and maintenance
Emotional upheaval
More manageable property
May lose community connections
Could be closer to family or amenities
Stamp duty on new purchase
Equity Release (Alternative to Downsizing)
Feature
Details
What it is
Borrow against your home while continuing to live in it
Minimum age
Usually 55–60
Types
Lifetime mortgage (most common), home reversion
Interest rates
5–7% (fixed for life)
Repayment
Repaid from estate when you die or enter long-term care
No negative equity guarantee
You never owe more than your home is worth (with ERC-approved providers)
Impact on benefits
May affect means-tested benefits
Impact on inheritance
Reduces the value of your estate
Regulation
Must receive independent legal advice
Always take independent financial advice before considering equity release.
Estate Planning
Action
Why it matters
Write or update your will
Ensures your assets go where you want
Consider a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA)
Appoints someone to manage finances if you cannot
Review pension beneficiary nominations
Pensions pass outside your will — nominations must be up to date
Gift allowances
You can give up to £3,000/year IHT-free, plus small gifts and wedding gifts
Review IHT position
Nil-rate band £325,000, residence nil-rate band £175,000