Public Sector & Occupational Pensions UK

LGPS (Local Government Pension Scheme) Guide

How the Local Government Pension Scheme works — contributions, benefits, retirement age, death benefits, and how to calculate your LGPS pension.

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.

The Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) is one of the UK’s largest pension schemes with around 6.7 million members. If you work for a local council, school, university, police staff, fire authority, or other qualifying body, you’re likely in the LGPS.

For the wider cluster covering workplace pensions, scheme types and other public-sector routes, use the main Workplace Pensions hub.

Key Facts

FeatureDetail
Type of schemeDefined benefit — Career Average (CARE) from 2014
Accrual rate1/49th of pensionable pay each year
Employee contributions5.5%–12.5% of pay
Employer contributionsTypically 15–25%
Normal pension ageState Pension age (for post-2014 service)
Early retirementFrom age 55 (57 from 2028) — with reduction
Tax-free lump sumUp to 25% of capital value
Death benefitsLump sum + survivor pension included
Inflation protectionPension increases with CPI annually

Who’s in the LGPS?

Employer typeExamples
Local authoritiesCouncil staff, social workers, administrative staff
SchoolsTeaching assistants, school office staff, caretakers (teachers have a separate scheme)
UniversitiesNon-academic staff (some academic staff are in USS instead)
Police (civilian staff)Police staff, PCSOs (police officers have their own scheme)
Fire (civilian staff)Non-operational fire service staff
Other public bodiesHousing associations, academy trusts, transport bodies

Note: Teachers, NHS staff, police officers, and firefighters have their own separate pension schemes.

Employee Contribution Rates (2025/26)

Actual pensionable pay bandContribution rate
Up to £17,6005.5%
£17,601–£27,6005.8%
£27,601–£44,9006.5%
£44,901–£56,8006.8%
£56,801–£79,7008.5%
£79,701–£112,9009.9%
£112,901–£133,10010.5%
£133,101–£199,70011.4%
Over £199,70012.5%

Your contributions get tax relief — so the real cost is lower than the percentage suggests.

What You Actually Pay (After Tax Relief)

SalaryContribution rateMonthly contributionAfter 20% tax reliefEffective cost
£25,0005.8%£120.83£96.674.6% of pay
£35,0006.5%£189.58£151.675.2%
£50,0006.8%£283.33£226.67 (mix of 20% and 40% relief)~4.5%

How Your Pension Builds Up

From April 2014: Career Average (CARE)

ElementDetail
Each year you build up1/49th of your pensionable pay
RevaluationEach year’s pension is increased by CPI
ExampleEarn £30,000 → build up £612.24 of annual pension

Example: 20 Years in LGPS

YearSalaryPension built up (1/49th)
Year 1£28,000£571.43
Year 5£32,000£653.06
Year 10£37,000£755.10
Year 15£42,000£857.14
Year 20£48,000£979.59
Total (before revaluation)~£14,500/year
After CPI revaluation~£17,000–£19,000/year (depending on inflation)

Before April 2014: Final Salary

PeriodCalculation
April 2008–March 20141/60th × final pay × years of membership
Before April 20081/80th × final pay × years + automatic lump sum of 3/80ths × final pay × years

Taking Your LGPS Pension

Normal Pension Age

Service periodNormal pension age
Post-April 2014State Pension age (currently 66, rising to 67 from 2028)
Pre-April 2014 (post-2008)65
Pre-April 200865 (or 60 in some cases — check your benefit statement)

Early Retirement Reduction

If you retire before your normal pension age, your pension is reduced:

Years earlyApproximate reduction
1 year~4–5%
2 years~8–10%
3 years~12–14%
5 years~19–23%
10 years~36–42%

The exact reduction depends on your age and whether the pension is pre- or post-2014.

Late Retirement Increase

Years lateApproximate increase
1 year~5–6%
2 years~10–12%
3 years~16–18%

Tax-Free Lump Sum

DetailInformation
Exchange rate£1 of annual pension = £12 of tax-free lump sum
Maximum25% of the capital value of your benefits
Pre-2008 automatic lump sumSome members get a lump sum automatically for pre-2008 service

Example

ScenarioAmount
Annual pension at retirement£15,000
Choose to exchange £3,000 of pensionGet £36,000 lump sum
Remaining annual pension£12,000/year
Tax-free lump sum£36,000

Death Benefits

BenefitDetail
Death in service lump sum3 × annual pensionable pay
Survivor pension (spouse/civil partner)1/160th of pensionable pay × membership years (post-2014)
Eligible children’s pensionProvided for dependent children
Nomination formComplete an Expression of Wish form for the lump sum
Cohabiting partnerMay qualify — must meet specific criteria

50/50 Section

FeatureFull section50/50 section
Your contributionsFull rate (5.5–12.5%)Half rate
Pension built up1/49th per year1/98th per year
Death benefitsFullFull (not halved)
Ill-health benefitsFullFull
PurposeNormal accrualReduces cost when money is tight

You can switch between full and 50/50 at any time.

Sources

  1. Civil Service Pension Scheme