The pension lifetime allowance (LTA) — which capped the total amount you could build up in pensions before facing a tax charge — was abolished from 6 April 2024. This was a significant change for higher earners and diligent savers. However, new rules replaced it, and understanding them is important for effective retirement planning.
What Was the Lifetime Allowance?
The LTA was a cap on the total value of your pension savings across all schemes:
| Tax Year | LTA |
|---|---|
| 2023/24 | £1,073,100 (charge removed but LTA remained) |
| 2022/23 | £1,073,100 (55% charge on excess lump sums, 25% on income) |
| Pre-2024 | Various levels down from £1.8 million peak |
Exceeding the LTA triggered penalty tax charges of 25% (on income) or 55% (on lump sums taken above the limit).
What Replaced It (From April 2024)
New Lump Sum Limits
| New Limit | Amount | What It Caps |
|---|---|---|
| Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) | £268,275 | Maximum tax-free cash you can take from all pensions |
| Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA) | £1,073,100 | Maximum combined tax-free lump sums and tax-free death benefits |
Key Changes
| Before (LTA) | After (April 2024) |
|---|---|
| Cap on total pension value | No cap — save as much as you can |
| Excess taxed at 25%/55% | No excess tax on accumulation |
| 25% of pot tax-free (up to 25% of LTA) | 25% of pot tax-free, capped at £268,275 |
| Death benefits tested against LTA | Death benefits tested against LSDBA |
What This Means for You
If Your Pension Is Under £1 Million
The changes have minimal impact. You can:
- Continue contributing normally (within the annual allowance)
- Take 25% as tax-free cash at retirement (under £268,275)
- The rest is taxed as income through drawdown or via an annuity
If Your Pension Is Over £1 Million
Good news — you no longer face a penalty charge for having a large pension. You can:
- Continue saving without fear of an excess charge
- Still only take £268,275 as a tax-free lump sum
- Pay income tax at your marginal rate on the rest when withdrawn
If You Have Protected Allowances
Some people registered for fixed protection or individual protection before previous LTA reductions. These protections may still be relevant as they can provide a higher lump sum allowance than £268,275:
| Protection | Enhanced LSA |
|---|---|
| Fixed Protection 2016 | £312,500 (25% of £1.25m) |
| Individual Protection 2016 | 25% of your protected amount (up to £312,500) |
| Primary Protection | Higher amounts possible |
Important: If you hold a protection, check whether it gives you a higher LSA. Do not take any action that might invalidate your protection without advice.
Pension Savings Strategy Post-LTA
Contribute Without Fear
With no overall limit on accumulation, the strategy is simply:
- Maximise employer contributions (free money)
- Use the full £60,000 annual allowance (including carry forward)
- Claim all available tax relief
- Choose tax-efficient investments within your pension
Tax-Free Lump Sum Planning
The £268,275 LSA applies across all your pensions. If you have multiple pots:
| Pot | Value | 25% Tax-Free | LSA Used |
|---|---|---|---|
| Workplace pension | £400,000 | £100,000 | £100,000 |
| SIPP | £500,000 | £125,000 | £125,000 |
| Old pension | £200,000 | £43,275 (remaining LSA) | £43,275 |
| Totals | £1,100,000 | £268,275 | £268,275 (used up) |
The fourth pot and beyond would have no tax-free lump sum available — the entire withdrawal would be taxable.
Death Benefits
If you die before age 75:
- Pension savings can pass to beneficiaries free of income tax up to the LSDBA (£1,073,100)
- Sums above this are taxed as income on the recipient
If you die after age 75:
- Beneficiaries pay income tax at their marginal rate on withdrawals (regardless of LSDBA)
Alternative Tax-Free Savings
Once you have maximised your pension (hitting the annual allowance), use:
- ISAs — £20,000/year, completely tax-free
- Venture Capital Trusts — 30% income tax relief, tax-free dividends and gains
- Premium Bonds — tax-free prizes (but lower expected return)
Planning Considerations
| Scenario | Action |
|---|---|
| Young, high earner | Contribute maximum — no LTA penalty to worry about |
| Mid-career, approaching £268k in tax-free cash terms | Plan which pots to take tax-free cash from |
| Near retirement, large pot | Focus on tax-efficient drawdown strategy |
| Have old protections | Check whether they provide enhanced lump sum |
| Self-employed | Use a SIPP and maximise contributions |
For comprehensive retirement planning, see our retirement income guide and pension contributions guide.