Pensions & Retirement

Retirement Income Guide UK — How to Fund Your Life After Work

Plan your retirement income from all sources — state pension, workplace pensions, SIPPs, ISAs, and more. Drawdown strategies, tax planning, and making your money last.

Creating a sustainable, tax-efficient retirement income requires combining multiple sources — state pension, workplace pensions, personal savings, and potentially other income. Getting this right can make the difference between a comfortable retirement and a stressful one.

Your Retirement Income Sources

1. State Pension

FeatureAmount (2025/26)
Full new state pension£11,502/year (£221.20/week)
Years of NI contributions needed35 years for full amount
Minimum qualifying years10 years
State pension age67 (rising to 68 between 2044-2046)

Check your forecast at gov.uk/check-state-pension.

2. Workplace and Personal Pensions

Your defined contribution pension pot can provide income through:

  • Drawdown — keep your pot invested and withdraw as needed
  • Annuity — convert your pot into guaranteed income for life
  • UFPLS — take lump sums (25% tax-free per withdrawal)
  • Combination — mix drawdown and annuity

3. ISA Savings and Investments

ISA withdrawals are completely tax-free — making ISAs a valuable complement to taxable pension income:

ISA TypeUse in Retirement
Cash ISAEmergency fund, short-term needs
Stocks and Shares ISAGrowth and income
LISAAccessible from age 60

4. Other Sources

  • Rental income from property
  • Part-time work or freelancing
  • Defined benefit pensions (if applicable)
  • Savings and investments outside tax wrappers
  • Equity release from your home (as a last resort)

How Much Do You Need?

PLSA Retirement Living Standards

StandardSingleCoupleCovers
Minimum£14,400£22,400Basic needs, limited extras
Moderate£31,300£43,100Comfortable, holidays in Europe, dining out
Comfortable£43,100£59,000Generous lifestyle, long-haul holidays, new car

Pension Pot Needed (Beyond State Pension)

After deducting the full state pension (~£11,500/year):

Target IncomeExtra NeededPot Required (4% rule)
£20,000£8,500£212,500
£25,000£13,500£337,500
£30,000£18,500£462,500
£40,000£28,500£712,500
£50,000£38,500£962,500

Drawdown Strategies

The 4% Rule

Withdraw 4% of your initial portfolio per year, adjusted for inflation. Historically, this has sustained portfolios for 30+ years.

Example: £400,000 pension pot

  • Year 1 withdrawal: £16,000
  • Adjusts with inflation each subsequent year
  • Combined with state pension: £27,500/year

The Bucket Strategy

Divide your retirement savings into three “buckets”:

BucketTimeframeWhat It HoldsPurpose
1. Cash0–2 yearsCash, savings accountsImmediate income needs
2. Bonds3–5 yearsBonds, giltsMedium-term stability
3. Growth6+ yearsEquities, index fundsLong-term growth

You draw from Bucket 1 for daily expenses, replenishing it from Bucket 2, and replenishing Bucket 2 from Bucket 3 during good market conditions.

Natural Yield

Only withdraw the dividends and interest your investments produce — never touching the capital. This preserves your pot for inheritance but may provide a lower income (typically 2–4% per year).

Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Planning

Order of Withdrawals

Drawing from different sources in the right order minimises tax:

  1. Tax-free pension lump sum (25%) — no tax, no impact on tax bands
  2. ISA withdrawals — tax-free, do not affect your tax bill
  3. Pension drawdown up to the personal allowance — tax-free income
  4. Pension drawdown into basic rate — at 20%
  5. Taxable investments — use CGT annual exempt amount first

Example: Tax-Efficient £30,000 Income

SourceAmountTax
State pension£11,500Uses part of personal allowance
Pension drawdown£1,070Uses remaining personal allowance
ISA withdrawal£10,000Tax-free
Pension drawdown (basic rate)£7,43020% = £1,486 tax
Total income£30,000£1,486 total tax

Effective tax rate: 5% — much lower than working-life tax rates.

Avoiding the 40% Tax Trap

Keep total taxable income below £50,270 to avoid higher rate tax. If you need more, draw the excess from ISAs (tax-free).

Making Your Money Last

The Risks

RiskImpactMitigation
Living longer than expectedPot runs outPart-annuity for guaranteed income floor
Market crash early in retirementSequence of returns riskCash buffer (Bucket 1), reduce withdrawals
InflationPurchasing power erodesMaintain equity allocation for growth
OverspendingPot depleted prematurelySet a sustainable withdrawal rate and review annually

Annual Review Checklist

Every year, review:

  1. Portfolio value — are you on track?
  2. Withdrawal rate — adjust if returns have been poor
  3. Asset allocation — rebalance between buckets
  4. Tax efficiency — are you using all allowances?
  5. State pension forecast — is it unchanged?
  6. Insurance needs — health cover, long-term care planning

Getting Started

  1. Check your state pension forecast — gov.uk
  2. Review all pension pots — use pension transfers to consolidate
  3. Calculate your target income — using the PLSA standards as a guide
  4. Calculate your gap — total needed minus state pension = what your pots must provide
  5. Choose your drawdown strategy — 4% rule, buckets, or hybrid
  6. Get your tax planning right — draw from the right sources in the right order
  7. Consider professional advice — particularly for larger pots or complex situations