Pensions-and-Retirements

Lifetime ISA vs Pension for Retirement — Which Is Better?

How a Lifetime ISA and pension compare for retirement savings, including tax relief, access rules, and which to prioritise. UK comparison guide.

Both the Lifetime ISA and pension help you save for retirement with government support, but they work very differently. Here is how to decide which to prioritise.

LISA vs Pension at a Glance

Feature Lifetime ISA Workplace Pension Personal Pension (SIPP)
Government top-up/tax relief 25% bonus Tax relief at your marginal rate Tax relief at your marginal rate
Employer contributions No Yes (minimum 3% of qualifying earnings) No
Annual limit £4,000 £60,000 (pension annual allowance) £60,000
Lifetime limit £128,000 contributions (age 18–50) + bonus None (Lifetime Allowance abolished) None
Access age 60 55 (rising to 57 from 2028) 55 (rising to 57 from 2028)
Early access penalty 25% charge (lose your own money) Generally not possible until min pension age Generally not possible until min pension age
Tax on withdrawal Completely tax-free 25% tax-free, rest taxed as income 25% tax-free, rest taxed as income
Who can open Age 18–39 (contribute until 50) Any employee auto-enrolled Anyone under 75
Inheritance ISA rules — passes to beneficiaries, no IHT normally Pension rules — usually IHT-free if die before 75 Same as workplace pension

The Government Top-Up Compared

Basic Rate Taxpayer (20%)

Feature LISA Pension
You pay in £4,000 £4,000 (net)
Government adds £1,000 (25% bonus) £1,000 (20% tax relief — pension provider claims)
Total in account £5,000 £5,000
Employer adds (workplace) Nothing Up to £1,440+ (3% minimum on qualifying earnings)
Effective total £5,000 Up to £6,440+

For basic rate taxpayers, the government contribution is identical. But a workplace pension is better because of employer contributions.

Higher Rate Taxpayer (40%)

Feature LISA Pension
You pay in £4,000 £4,000 (net)
Government adds £1,000 (25% bonus) £1,000 (basic rate relief at source)
Extra relief via Self Assessment Nothing £1,333 (additional 20% via tax return)
Total in account £5,000 £5,000 → but costs you only £2,667 effectively
Effective government top-up 25% 67%

For higher rate taxpayers, the pension is significantly more generous.

Additional Rate Taxpayer (45%)

Feature LISA Pension
Effective government top-up 25% 82%

The pension advantage grows with your tax rate.

Tax on Withdrawals

Feature LISA Pension
Tax-free amount 100% of withdrawals 25% tax-free (pension commencement lump sum)
Tax on rest £0 Taxed as income at your marginal rate
If retired on basic rate LISA wins — completely tax-free 75% taxed at 20%
If retired with no/low income Same — both effectively tax-free Pension personal allowance means first £12,570 tax-free

Withdrawal Tax Comparison — £100,000 Pot

Tax in retirement LISA withdrawal Pension withdrawal
No other income £0 tax £0 tax (within personal allowance)
Income above personal allowance at basic rate £0 tax ~£15,000 tax (on 75% of pot at 20%)
Income at higher rate £0 tax ~£30,000 tax (on 75% of pot at 40%)

The LISA’s tax-free withdrawal is its biggest advantage — but only if the smaller government top-up does not offset this benefit.

Access and Flexibility

Feature LISA Pension
Age you can access for retirement 60 55 (57 from 2028)
Can you access earlier? Yes — but 25% penalty (lose own money) Generally no — only in cases of severe ill health
Use for first home Yes (under £450,000, held 12+ months) No
Drawdown options Full withdrawal or partial Flexible drawdown, annuity, or UFPLS
Death before access age Passes to estate (no penalty) Passes to beneficiaries (tax-free if before 75)

Who Should Prioritise What

Your situation Priority order
Employee with employer pension match 1. Workplace pension (to get full employer match), 2. LISA, 3. More pension/SIPP
Self-employed, basic rate taxpayer LISA and pension are equal — LISA offers tax-free withdrawals
Self-employed, higher rate taxpayer 1. Pension (40% relief), 2. LISA
Saving for first home AND retirement LISA (dual purpose — can use for home or retirement)
Over 40 Cannot open LISA — pension only
Very high earner (tapered annual allowance) LISA may be useful alongside pension if annual allowance is restricted
Want access before 60 Pension (access from 55/57) wins — LISA penalty before 60

Maximum LISA Contributions

Open at age Annual contributions (to age 50) Total contributions Total with 25% bonus (no growth)
18 32 years × £4,000 £128,000 £160,000
25 25 years × £4,000 £100,000 £125,000
30 20 years × £4,000 £80,000 £100,000
39 (last year to open) 11 years × £4,000 £44,000 £55,000

The LISA’s £4,000 annual limit is relatively small compared to the £60,000 pension annual allowance.

The Employer Contribution Factor

This is often the deciding factor. Employer pension contributions are free money.

Employer match Your £4,000 contribution Employer adds Total in pension
Minimum (3% qualifying earnings) £4,000 ~£740 (on £24,660 qualifying band) £4,740 + tax relief
5% match on full salary (£30,000) £4,000 £1,500 £5,500 + tax relief
8% match on full salary (£40,000) £4,000 £3,200 £7,200 + tax relief

Always contribute enough to your workplace pension to get the full employer match before putting money into a LISA.

Salary Sacrifice — The Hidden Pension Advantage

If your employer offers salary sacrifice pension contributions, you also save National Insurance.

Feature Normal pension contribution Salary sacrifice
Income tax relief Yes (at your marginal rate) Yes
National Insurance saving No Yes (12% or 2% depending on earnings)
Employer NI saving No Yes — some employers share this with you

Salary sacrifice adds another 12% effective benefit that the LISA cannot match.

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