Pension Planning UK 2026/27 — How Much You Need and How to Get There

Pension Sharing on Divorce UK — How Pensions Are Split

How pensions are divided on divorce in the UK, pension sharing orders, offsetting, attachment orders, and how to protect your pension in a settlement.

Pension information is based on current UK legislation. Pensions are regulated by the FCA and The Pensions Regulator. This is not financial advice — consider consulting an FCA-regulated financial adviser.

Pensions are often the second largest asset in a divorce (after the family home). Understanding how they’re divided is essential to getting a fair settlement.

How Pensions Are Dealt With in Divorce

MethodHow it worksProsCons
Pension sharing orderCourt order splits a % of one pension into the other spouse’s nameClean break, each spouse has their own pensionCosts of actuary and implementation
OffsettingPension kept intact, balanced against other assets (e.g. house)Simple, avoids splitting the pensionHard to value accurately, may not be truly “fair”
Pension attachment (earmarking)Part of pension income paid to ex-spouse when it comes into paymentNo upfront costsNo clean break, payments stop if the receiving spouse remarries or the pension member dies, rarely used

Which Method Is Best?

SituationRecommended method
Both spouses want a clean breakPension sharing
One spouse has a much larger pensionPension sharing
Other assets (house, savings) can balance the pensionOffsetting
Pension is the main/only significant assetPension sharing
Amicable split, simple financesOffsetting or pension sharing

Pension Sharing Orders

FeatureDetail
What it doesTransfers a percentage of one spouse’s pension to the other
Who decides the %The court — based on what’s fair, not necessarily 50/50
ImplementationThe pension provider creates a pension credit for the receiving spouse
Options for the creditTransfer to a new pension in your name, or remain as a separate pot within the same scheme
TimelineTake effect on the date the divorce is finalised (decree absolute / final order)
Implementation deadlineUsually 4 months from the date of the order
Types of pension includedWorkplace, personal, SIPP, SSAS, final salary (DB), defined contribution (DC), state pension — but see below

What Pensions Can Be Shared?

Pension typeCan it be shared?Notes
Workplace pension (DC)YesMost straightforward to share
Personal/SIPPYesStraightforward
Final salary (DB)YesMore complex — needs a PODE actuarial report
State pensionNo (England & Wales) / Yes (Scotland — partially)Additional State Pension/SERPS can be shared in England & Wales; basic State Pension cannot
Armed Forces pensionYesSubject to specific scheme rules
NHS pensionYesCommonly shared — DB scheme
Teacher’s pensionYesDB scheme
LGPSYesDB scheme

The Process

StepActionWho’s involved
1Obtain pension valuations — request CE (Cash Equivalent) values from each pension providerBoth spouses request from their providers (free)
2Get actuarial advice — a PODE prepares a report on how to achieve a fair splitPension actuary (£500–£1,500 per report)
3Agree the split — negotiate what percentage to shareSolicitors and/or mediators
4Apply to court — include the pension sharing order in the financial consent orderSolicitor/court (£593 court fee)
5Court approves the order — the judge reviews and approvesCourt
6Divorce finalised — decree absolute or final orderCourt
7Pension provider implements — transfers the pension creditPension scheme (within 4 months)

Costs

ItemTypical cost
Pension valuation (CE value)Free from the provider
PODE actuarial report£500–£1,500 per pension
Solicitor’s fees (agreed/consent order)£1,000–£3,000
Solicitor’s fees (contested)£3,000–£20,000+
Court fee for financial order£593
Pension provider implementation fee£0–£1,500
Mediation (if used)£300–£600 per session

Valuing Pensions

Pension typeValuation methodNotes
Defined contribution (DC)Cash Equivalent (CE) — the current fund valueStraightforward — the CE is usually an accurate reflection of value
Defined benefit (DB/final salary)Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV)Can significantly understate the true value — actuarial advice essential
State pensionNot directly valuedAdditional State Pension can be shared but basic cannot

Why DB Pensions Need Special Attention

IssueDetail
CETV often understates valueA DB pension paying £10,000/year for life may have a CETV of £200,000 — but the true cost to replicate that income could be £300,000+
Guaranteed vs market riskDB pensions provide a guaranteed income — DC pensions don’t
Inflation protectionMost DB pensions increase with inflation — not reflected in CETV
A PODE report is essentialAn actuary can calculate a fair sharing percentage that accounts for these differences

Pension Offsetting

FeatureDetail
How it worksOne spouse keeps the pension, the other gets a larger share of other assets (e.g. the house)
ExampleHusband has a £300,000 pension. Wife keeps £200,000 of house equity instead of a pension share
AdvantageAvoids the cost and complexity of a pension sharing order
RiskThe pension and house are different types of asset — the pension is locked until retirement, the house is accessible now
Valuation issueHard to directly compare — £100,000 in a pension is NOT the same as £100,000 in cash

Scotland — Key Differences

FeatureScotland
Legal frameworkFamily Law (Scotland) Act 1985
Period of sharingOnly pension accrued during the marriage (from date of marriage to date of separation)
ApproachStarting point of equal sharing of matrimonial property
State pensionAdditional State Pension can be shared
Automatic division?No — still requires a court order or agreement
Prenuptial agreementsMore readily enforceable than in England & Wales

Common Mistakes

MistakeConsequence
Ignoring pensions in the settlementYou may miss out on your share of the largest asset after the house
Relying on CETV alone for DB pensionsLikely undervalues the pension — leading to an unfair settlement
Offsetting without actuarial adviceComparing pension and non-pension assets without adjusting for their different characteristics
Not including pensions in the consent orderPensions can only be shared by court order — verbal agreements aren’t enforceable
Delaying the financial settlementPension values can change significantly — and you remain financially tied
Not getting independent legal adviceBoth parties should have their own solicitor

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Pension and retirement
  2. MoneyHelper — Pensions guidance