Pensions-and-Retirements

NI Voluntary Contributions — Should I Buy Extra Years for My State Pension?

Guide to buying voluntary National Insurance contributions to boost your State Pension. Costs, deadlines, who should pay, and how to check your NI record.

If you have gaps in your National Insurance (NI) record, buying voluntary contributions could add hundreds of pounds a year to your State Pension — for life. Here is everything you need to know.

How the State Pension Works

Detail Amount (2026/27)
Full new State Pension £230.25 per week (£11,973 per year)
Qualifying years needed for full amount 35 years
Minimum years needed for any State Pension 10 years
Each qualifying year adds Approximately £6.58/week (£342/year)

You build up qualifying years through:

  • Working and paying National Insurance (employee or self-employed)
  • Receiving National Insurance credits (e.g. while claiming certain benefits, caring for a child under 12)
  • Paying voluntary contributions

Related: State Pension Guide

Who Should Consider Buying Extra Years?

Situation Should you buy?
You have fewer than 35 qualifying years and are approaching State Pension age Yes — likely very worthwhile
You have gaps from time abroad Yes — often excellent value
You have gaps from career breaks (caring, illness) Check first — you may have NI credits you don’t know about
You have gaps from self-employment before Class 2 was abolished Yes — check your record
You already have 35+ qualifying years No benefit — you already qualify for the full State Pension
You are very far from State Pension age with years of work ahead Probably not yet — you may fill gaps naturally through future employment

How to Check Your NI Record

Step by Step

Step Action
1 Go to gov.uk/check-national-insurance-record
2 Sign in with Government Gateway or GOV.UK One Login
3 View your record year by year
4 Note any gaps — the system shows which years are full, which have gaps, and which can be filled
5 Check your State Pension forecast at gov.uk/check-state-pension

Your forecast will tell you:

  • How much State Pension you are currently on track to receive
  • How many qualifying years you have
  • Whether paying voluntary contributions would increase your pension

Phone alternative: Call HMRC National Insurance helpline on 0300 200 3500 (Monday to Friday 8am–6pm).

Cost vs Benefit — Is It Worth It?

The Numbers

Factor Amount
Cost of one year of Class 3 voluntary contributions (2025/26 rate) ~£907
Additional State Pension gained per year ~£342 per year
Years to break even 2.7 years
If you live 20 years after State Pension age Return of £6,840 for a £907 investment
If you live 25 years after State Pension age Return of £8,550 for a £907 investment

Worked Example — Filling 5 Years of Gaps

Detail Amount
Cost of filling 5 years ~£4,535 (5 × £907)
Additional State Pension per year ~£1,710 (5 × £342)
Break-even point 2.7 years of pension payments
Total gained over 20 years of retirement £34,200
Total gained over 25 years of retirement £42,750
Net gain over 20 years £29,665

This is one of the best guaranteed returns available — it beats virtually any savings account, ISA, or low-risk investment.

When It Is NOT Worth It

Scenario Why
You already have 35 qualifying years No additional benefit — the State Pension is capped at 35 years
Your forecast already shows the full amount Extra years won’t increase it
You are young with many working years ahead You will likely fill gaps naturally — wait and check again later
You have serious health concerns The break-even point is approximately 3 years — consider your individual circumstances
You are on Pension Credit Higher State Pension may reduce your Pension Credit — check first

Deadlines — Act Quickly

Gap period Deadline to fill Notes
2006/07 to 2018/19 5 April 2025 — deadline has now passed Extended deadline has expired for most of these years
2019/20 5 April 2026 Last chance for this year
2020/21 5 April 2027
2021/22 5 April 2028
2022/23 5 April 2029
2023/24 5 April 2030
General rule 6 years from end of tax year After this, the gap is permanent

Important: The extended deadline to fill gaps back to 2006/07 was 5 April 2025 — if you missed it, those years are now closed. Focus on any remaining gaps within the standard 6-year window.

How to Pay Voluntary Contributions

Step Action
1 Check your NI record and identify which years to fill
2 Call HMRC NI helpline: 0300 200 3500
3 Ask them to confirm the cost and confirm it will increase your State Pension
4 Pay by bank transfer, cheque, or (for ongoing contributions) direct debit
5 Keep written confirmation of what you paid and which years it covers

Critical step: Always call HMRC before paying to confirm:

  • Which years have gaps
  • How much each year costs to fill
  • Whether filling the gap will actually increase your State Pension forecast
  • That the deadline has not passed

Do not just pay without checking. HMRC will tell you exactly how much benefit you will get.

Class 2 vs Class 3 Contributions

Type Who pays Cost (2025/26) Qualifies for State Pension?
Class 2 Self-employed (now abolished for current year) £3.45/week (~£179/year) Yes — full qualifying year
Class 3 Voluntary — anyone filling gaps £17.45/week (~£907/year) Yes — full qualifying year

If you were self-employed in the past and have gaps, check whether you can fill them with the cheaper Class 2 rate. This is particularly relevant for years when Class 2 still existed. Call HMRC to check eligibility.

National Insurance Credits — Free Qualifying Years

Before paying, check whether you are entitled to free NI credits for any gap years:

Credit type Who qualifies
Child Benefit Parent or carer of a child under 12 (credits applied automatically through Child Benefit claim)
Carer’s Credit Caring for someone 35+ hours a week (even if you don’t qualify for Carer’s Allowance)
Jobseeker’s Allowance Automatic credits while claiming JSA
Employment and Support Allowance Automatic credits while claiming ESA
Universal Credit Credits applied if earnings are low
Jury service Credits for time on jury duty
Specified Adult Childcare Credit Grandparents and other family members caring for a child while the parent works

Specified Adult Childcare Credit is often overlooked. If you care for a grandchild while the parent works, the parent can transfer their NI credit to you. Apply at gov.uk.

Special Situations

Living or Working Abroad

Situation Options
Working in an EU/EEA country May count towards UK State Pension under social security agreements
Working in other countries with agreements Check gov.uk/national-insurance-if-you-go-abroad for bilateral agreements
No agreement with country Pay Class 3 voluntary contributions to maintain UK record
Returning to the UK Check your record on return — you may have gaps worth filling

Related: Money Guide — UK Expats Returning Home

Women with Gaps from the 1980s–2000s

Many women have NI gaps from years spent raising families before Child Benefit credits were automatic. Check whether:

  • You claimed Child Benefit (credits should have been applied)
  • Home Responsibilities Protection (HRP) was recorded on your record
  • You can convert HRP years to qualifying years — contact HMRC

Step-by-Step Action Plan

Step Action When
1 Check your NI record at gov.uk/check-national-insurance-record Now
2 Check your State Pension forecast at gov.uk/check-state-pension Now
3 Identify any gaps within the 6-year filling window Now
4 Call HMRC on 0300 200 3500 to confirm cost and benefit Before paying anything
5 Check whether any gaps are covered by credits you haven’t claimed Before paying
6 Pay for any years that HMRC confirms will increase your pension Before the deadline
7 Keep confirmation letters and payment records Ongoing