Life-Events

Approaching Retirement: Financial Checklist for 5–10 Years Out

The complete financial checklist for the 5–10 years before retirement in the UK — reviewing your pension, State Pension forecast, debt clearance, tax planning, drawdown decisions, and planning your income in retirement.

The 5–10 years before retirement are the most financially critical of your entire working life. Decisions made now about your pension, tax planning, debt, and income structure will determine whether you’re comfortable or constrained in retirement.

Here’s a comprehensive checklist of everything to review and action.


1. Check Your State Pension Forecast

Do this today. Visit gov.uk/check-state-pension.

Your forecast shows:

  • Your projected State Pension at retirement age (currently 66, rising to 67 from 2026–2028)
  • Your current NI qualifying years
  • How many more years you need for the full State Pension
  • Gaps in your NI record and whether you can fill them

Full new State Pension (2026/27): £221.20/week = £11,502.40/year

If you have gaps: You may be able to fill them with voluntary Class 3 NI contributions. At £824/year per qualifying year purchased (and 3+ years of State Pension to collect), it can be an exceptional return. Deadline to purchase historical years at transitional prices has now passed (was April 2025) — but future gaps remain fillable.


2. Track Down All Your Pensions

The average UK worker has 11 jobs in their lifetime — and likely has pensions scattered across multiple providers.

Find lost pensions:

Once found, request a current value (or CETV for defined benefit schemes) and annual statement.

3. Quantify Your Total Expected Retirement Income

Build a full picture of all income sources:

SourceEstimated annual amountStarts at
State PensionUp to £11,502Age 66–67
Defined benefit (final salary) pension(s)£Scheme retirement age
Defined contribution pension(s) — estimated£Age 57+ (from 2028)
ISA and savings income£Any time
Rental income (if applicable)£Any time
Part-time work (if planned)£As relevant
Total£

Compare to target income: What do you need in retirement? The PLSA standards suggest £31,300–£43,100/year for a comfortable single-person retirement.


4. Address the Gap — If There Is One

If total projected income falls short of your target, your options are:

OptionNotes
Increase pension contributionsEvery year earlier than retirement is more impactful
Top up via SIPPIf you’ve used employer scheme to max; allows flexible contributions
Defer retirement by 1–3 yearsMore contributions + fewer years drawing; significantly increases pot
Defer State PensionIncreases State Pension by ~5.8% per year deferred
Reduce target spendingReassess what “comfortable” means to you
Downsize propertyRelease equity; reduce housing costs

5. Pension Consolidation Decision

If you have multiple small DC pensions from different jobs, consider whether to consolidate:

Benefits of consolidation:

  • Simpler to manage and monitor
  • Potentially lower charges on a larger pot
  • One investment strategy, not several

Risks:

  • Losing valuable guaranteed annuity rates on older pensions
  • Losing protected pension age (some old pensions allow access from 50)
  • Exit charges on some older policies

Never consolidate a defined benefit (final salary) pension without independent financial advice. DB pensions guarantee income in a way DC cannot replicate easily.


6. Review Investment Risk in Pension

Most default pension funds use “lifestyling” — automatically shifting toward lower-risk assets as you approach retirement. Check:

  • Is your pension in a lifestyling fund?
  • Is the de-risking timeline appropriate? (Funds often assume 65 as retirement — if retiring later, you’re de-risking too early)
  • If drawing down rather than buying annuity, you may want to stay invested longer

Contact your pension provider to understand what your money is invested in.


7. Pay Off High-Cost Debt Before Retirement

Entering retirement with debt significantly increases your required income.

Priority:

  1. Credit cards and unsecured loans — pay off as quickly as possible
  2. Car finance — structure so it ends before you retire
  3. Mortgage — consider whether overpaying to clear it before retirement is optimal

Mortgage payoff: Clearing your mortgage before retirement is not always mathematically optimal (money in pension may grow faster), but the psychological benefit of cost certainty can be significant. Run the numbers, then decide what suits you.


8. Tax Planning in Pre-Retirement Years

The 5 years before retirement are prime tax planning territory:

Annual ISA allowance: Maximise it. Up to £20,000/year into a Stocks and Shares ISA can be sheltered from capital gains and income tax — tax-free income or withdrawals in retirement.

Pension tax relief: Higher-rate taxpayers get 40% relief on pension contributions — meaning a £10,000 pension contribution effectively costs you £6,000. If you’re still a higher-rate taxpayer, these are your last years to benefit at the 40% rate.

Annual Allowance: £60,000/year (2026/27) including employer contributions. You can carry forward up to 3 years of unused allowance — check whether you have unused allowance to utilise.

Salary sacrifice: If your employer offers it, salary sacrifice pension contributions save you both income tax and National Insurance on contributions. Maximise this.


9. Plan Your Retirement Income Structure

How you draw income in retirement affects your tax significantly. The main options:

OptionWhat it meansBest when
AnnuityGuaranteed income for life in exchange for potPredictability valued; poor health; DB-style security wanted
Flexi-access drawdownKeep pot invested; draw as neededFlexible income needs; healthy; estate planning motivation
UFPLS (Uncrystallised Fund Pension Lump Sum)Take from uncrystallised pot; 25% tax-free each timeAd hoc flexibility
CombinationMix of aboveMost retirees use a blend

Tax planning in drawdown:

  • Draw income up to the basic rate threshold (£50,270) to avoid 40% tax
  • Use ISA withdrawals for top-up (tax-free, doesn’t count as income)
  • Take tax-free lump sum spread over years not all at once

10. Plan Your State Pension Timing

Defer or take? Each year you defer State Pension increases it by ~5.8%. Break-even point for deferral (when you’ve earned more by deferring) is approximately 17 years.

If you’re healthy and expect to live past 83–85, deferring can be financially worthwhile. If you need the income from 66, take it.


11. Protect What You’ve Built: Insurance Review

Life insurance: In retirement, the need typically reduces (no mortgage, children independent). You may not need term life insurance at all after 60.

State of health and condition-specific planning: Consider:

  • Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) — protect your financial affairs if you lose capacity. See our LPA guide
  • Healthcare planning — private health insurance can prevent delays in elective procedures
  • Care costs planning — consider care annuities or earmarking assets

12. Get Your Affairs in Order

TaskWhy
Up-to-date willEnsure assets go where you intend
Lasting Power of Attorney (financial + welfare)If you lose capacity, someone you trust handles finances
Update pension nominationsPension not covered by will — update nominations
Death in service: check beneficiariesEmployer life insurance
Beneficiary designations on all policiesInsurance, ISAs

Pre-Retirement Financial Checklist

TaskTimeframeDone?
Check State Pension forecast10 years before
Trace all pensions10 years before
Calculate total projected retirement income10 years before
Identify and quantify income gap10 years before
Increase pension contributions if gap existsNow
Review pension investment risk/lifestyling10 years before
Consider pension consolidation7–10 years before
Pay off high-cost, then all debts by retirement5–10 years before
Maximise ISA allowancesEvery year
Plan retirement income structure3–5 years before
Review and reduce life insurance5 years before
Make or update willNow
Create Lasting Power of AttorneyBefore retirement
Plan State Pension timing (defer vs take)2 years before
Consider independent financial advice3–5 years before

Sources

  1. PLSA — Retirement Living Standards
  2. GOV.UK — Check your State Pension
  3. MoneyHelper — Retirement planning