Pensions & Retirement

Pension Consolidation Guide UK — Combine Your Pension Pots

How to find, consolidate, and manage multiple pension pots. Benefits and risks of combining pensions, choosing a provider, and step-by-step process.

The average UK worker changes jobs 11 times during their career, potentially accumulating a pension pot with each employer. Many people lose track of old pensions, pay unnecessary fees on multiple small pots, and miss out on the benefits of a consolidated, well-managed retirement fund.

Why Consolidate?

Benefit Explanation
Simplicity One pot, one statement, one investment strategy
Lower fees Old pensions often charge 1%+ per year; modern providers charge 0.15–0.45%
Better investment choice Choose from thousands of funds rather than limited default options
Clearer planning See your entire pension wealth in one place
Easier drawdown One provider to manage when you start taking income

The Cost of High Fees

Pension Pot Annual Fee Over 20 Years (5% growth) Fee Difference
£50,000 0.25% £125,000
£50,000 0.75% £117,000 -£8,000
£50,000 1.50% £104,000 -£21,000

Moving from a 1.5% fee to a 0.25% fee on a £50,000 pot saves £21,000 over 20 years.

Step 1: Find All Your Pensions

Where to Look

  1. Pension Tracing Service — search at gov.uk/find-pension-contact-details
  2. Old payslips and employment contracts — look for pension provider names
  3. Previous employer HR departments — ask which provider they used
  4. Email archives — search for “pension”, “retirement”, or provider names
  5. Post and paperwork — annual pension statements (may have gone to an old address)

Information to Gather

For each pension, record:

Detail Why You Need It
Provider name To contact them
Policy/scheme number To identify your pot
Current value To assess total pension wealth
Type (DC/DB) Determines transfer process
Charges To compare with new provider
Guarantees To check before transferring
Nominated beneficiaries To update if transferring

Step 2: Decide Whether to Transfer

Always Check Before Transferring

Check Action
Guaranteed annuity rates? If yes, probably keep — these are very valuable
Protected tax-free cash > 25%? If yes, probably keep — you lose the protection on transfer
Defined benefit pension? If yes, seek independent financial advice before any transfer
Exit penalties? Calculate whether savings outweigh the penalty
Employer match still active? Keep your current workplace pension for ongoing contributions

Good Candidates for Transfer

  • Old defined contribution pensions with high fees (over 0.5%)
  • Small pots that are not being actively managed
  • Pensions with limited investment options
  • Pots from employers you left years ago
  • Any pension you have lost track of (after finding it)

Step 3: Choose a Receiving Provider

Provider Annual Fee Investment Range Best For
Vanguard 0.15% (max £375) Vanguard funds only Low-cost index fund investors
InvestEngine 0% (DIY) ETFs Fee-free ETF investing
AJ Bell 0.25% Funds, shares, ETFs Broad choice
Interactive Investor Flat £5.99–£11.99/month Full range Larger pots (£50k+)
Fidelity 0.35% (reducing) Wide range Good research and tools

For a detailed comparison, see our investment platform comparison.

Step 4: Initiate the Transfer

The process is straightforward:

  1. Open an account with your chosen provider (if you do not already have one)
  2. Start the transfer online — most providers have a dedicated transfer tool
  3. Provide old pension details — policy numbers, provider names
  4. The new provider contacts the old provider — no action needed from you
  5. Wait for funds to arrive — typically 2–8 weeks
  6. Invest the transferred funds — choose your investment strategy

During the Transfer

Your pension is typically in cash during the transfer — you are not invested. To minimise this:

  • Transfer during calm market conditions when possible
  • For large pots, consider transferring in stages
  • Have your investment choices ready so you can invest as soon as funds arrive

Step 5: Invest and Manage

Once consolidated, choose an appropriate investment strategy:

By Age

Age Range Suggested Allocation
Under 40 80-100% equities (global index funds)
40-50 70-90% equities, 10-30% bonds
50-60 60-80% equities, 20-40% bonds
60+ 40-70% equities, 30-60% bonds/cash

These are guidelines — your specific situation, risk tolerance, and other assets matter.

Key Principles

  • Diversify globally — don’t concentrate in a single market
  • Keep costs low — every 0.1% saved in fees compounds over decades
  • Rebalance annually — bring allocations back to target
  • Review your pension at least once a year
  • Increase contributions when you can — read our pension contributions guide

Common Questions

Can I Consolidate Into My Current Workplace Pension?

Yes, if your scheme accepts transfers in. This can be the simplest option if fees are competitive. However, you will be limited to the scheme’s investment choices.

Should I Keep a Separate SIPP?

Many people keep their current workplace pension (for employer contributions) alongside a SIPP (for old pensions and extra contributions). This gives you the best of both worlds — employer matching plus full investment control on past savings.

What About Defined Benefit Pensions?

DB (final salary) pensions should almost never be transferred without independent financial advice. The guaranteed income is typically more valuable than the transfer value offered. See our pension transfers guide for details.