Pensions & Retirement

Pension Tax Relief Guide UK — Claim Back Tax on Your Contributions

How pension tax relief works in the UK. Basic, higher and additional rate relief, how to claim, salary sacrifice, and strategies to maximise your pension tax benefits.

Pension tax relief is the most generous tax break available to UK taxpayers. It effectively means the government tops up your pension contributions, making pensions the most tax-efficient long-term savings vehicle by a significant margin. Understanding how to maximise this relief can add tens of thousands of pounds to your retirement fund.

How Tax Relief Works

When you contribute to a pension, HMRC adds back the income tax you paid on that money:

Tax Band You Pay (Net) HMRC Adds Gross Contribution Effective Cost
Basic rate (20%) £80 £20 £100 80p per £1
Higher rate (40%) £60 £40 £100 60p per £1
Additional rate (45%) £55 £45 £100 55p per £1

The Two Methods

Relief at source (most personal pensions, SIPPs):

  1. You contribute from your net pay (after tax)
  2. The pension provider claims basic rate (20%) from HMRC and adds it
  3. Higher/additional rate taxpayers claim the extra through Self Assessment

Net pay (most workplace pensions):

  1. Contributions are deducted from your gross salary before tax
  2. You receive full tax relief automatically
  3. Nothing more to claim

Check your payslip — if pension contributions are deducted before tax, you are on the net pay method and do not need to claim anything extra.

Claiming Higher Rate Relief

If you are a 40% or 45% taxpayer contributing to a pension that uses relief at source, you must claim the extra relief yourself. There are two ways:

Method 1: Self Assessment

Include your total gross pension contributions in your Self Assessment tax return. The extra relief is applied as a reduction to your tax bill.

Method 2: Tax Code Adjustment

Contact HMRC to have your tax code adjusted to reflect regular pension contributions. This spreads the extra relief across your pay throughout the year, increasing your monthly take-home pay.

Example: Higher Rate Taxpayer Contributing £500/month

Without Claiming Extra With Claiming Extra
You pay: £400/month You pay: £400/month
Provider adds: £100 (basic rate) Provider adds: £100 (basic rate)
Extra relief: Not claimed (£0) Extra relief via SA: £100/month
True cost to you: £400 True cost to you: £300

Over a year, that is £1,200 in unclaimed tax relief. Over a career, it could be tens of thousands.

Salary Sacrifice

Salary sacrifice is the most tax-efficient way to contribute to a pension:

How It Works

  1. You agree with your employer to reduce your gross salary
  2. Your employer adds the full amount (including what you would have paid in NI) to your pension
  3. Neither you nor your employer pays NI on the sacrificed amount

The Numbers

Contributing £500/month gross:

Method Your Cost Employer Cost Goes Into Pension
Personal contribution (relief at source) £400 £0 £500
Salary sacrifice £340 (after NI saving) Saves £69 NI £500+

With salary sacrifice, you save 8% employee NI on top of the income tax relief, and many employers add their 13.8% employer NI saving to your pension too.

If your employer offers salary sacrifice for pensions, almost always use it.

Annual Allowance

The maximum you can contribute (with tax relief) in a tax year:

Allowance 2025/26
Standard annual allowance £60,000
Or 100% of earnings (if lower) Your earnings
Money purchase annual allowance £10,000 (if you have accessed pension flexibly)

The £60,000 includes both your contributions and any employer contributions.

Carry Forward

If you did not use your full annual allowance in the past 3 years, you can carry it forward:

Tax Year Allowance Used Unused
2022/23 £40,000 £10,000 £30,000
2023/24 £60,000 £15,000 £45,000
2024/25 £60,000 £20,000 £40,000
2025/26 £60,000 £60,000
Total available 2025/26 £175,000

This is particularly useful for those receiving a bonus, inheritance, or other lump sum — a single large pension contribution can attract substantial tax relief.

See our pension annual allowance guide for full details.

The £100,000 Income Trap

If you earn between £100,000 and £125,140, your personal allowance is progressively withdrawn — creating an effective 60% tax rate. Pension contributions reduce your taxable income and can restore your personal allowance:

Example: Earning £110,000

Without Pension With £10,000 Pension Contribution
Taxable income: £110,000 Taxable income: £100,000
Personal allowance: £7,570 (reduced) Personal allowance: £12,570 (full)
Extra tax on £100k–£110k: ~60% Saves ~£6,000 in tax
Marginal relief on pension: ~60%

Contributing £10,000 to a pension effectively costs only £4,000 after tax relief in this scenario.

Strategies to Maximise Pension Tax Relief

  1. Capture your employer match — always contribute enough to get the full match (free money)
  2. Use salary sacrifice if available — saves NI on top of income tax
  3. Claim higher rate relief — do not leave money on the table
  4. Use carry forward for lump sum contributions — 3 years of unused allowance
  5. Contribute before 5 April — use your annual allowance before it expires
  6. Use pensions to avoid the £100k trap — restore your personal allowance
  7. Consider a SIPP for additional contributions with more investment choice