Having multiple pensions is completely normal and legal. Here’s how it works and whether you should combine them.
Can You Have Multiple Pensions?
Yes — there’s no limit. You can have:
- Multiple workplace pensions from different employers
- One or more personal pensions (including SIPPs)
- The State Pension (a separate entitlement based on NI contributions)
- Defined benefit pensions alongside defined contribution pensions
Most people who’ve changed jobs more than once will have at least 2–3 pension pots by the time they retire.
Contributing to Multiple Pensions
The Annual Allowance
The only limit on contributions is the annual allowance — the maximum total that can go into all your pensions in a tax year:
| Item | 2024/25 Limit |
|---|---|
| Standard annual allowance | £60,000 |
| Tapered allowance (high earners) | £10,000–£60,000 |
| Money purchase annual allowance (if you’ve accessed pension flexibly) | £10,000 |
This covers:
- Your personal contributions
- Employer contributions
- Tax relief added by HMRC
- Across all your pensions combined
Example — Contributing to Two Pensions
| Pension | Your Contribution | Employer Contribution | Tax Relief | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Workplace pension | £200/month | £150/month | (included in salary sacrifice) | £4,200/year |
| Personal SIPP | £300/month | — | £75/month (basic rate) | £4,500/year |
| Annual total | £8,700/year |
Well within the £60,000 limit — no issues at all.
Tax Relief on Multiple Pensions
- Workplace pension (salary sacrifice): Tax relief is automatic — you pay from your pre-tax salary
- Workplace pension (net pay): Tax relief is automatic at your marginal rate
- Personal pension/SIPP: The provider claims 20% basic rate relief. If you’re a higher-rate taxpayer, claim the extra through your tax return
You get tax relief on all your pensions — but total personal contributions can’t exceed 100% of your earnings in any tax year for tax relief purposes.
Why People Have Multiple Pensions
Job Changes
The most common reason. With auto-enrolment, every employer sets up a new pension. Change jobs 5 times and you have 5 pension pots.
Supplementing Workplace Pension
Some people open a personal pension or SIPP alongside their workplace pension to:
- Invest in funds not available through their workplace scheme
- Contribute more than their employer arrangement allows
- Have more control over investments
Different Pension Types
You might have:
- An old defined benefit pension from a previous employer
- A current defined contribution workplace pension
- A personal SIPP for additional savings
Tracking Your Pensions
The Problem With Multiple Pots
| Issue | Risk |
|---|---|
| Lost pensions | You forget about an old pot or lose the paperwork |
| Poor investments | Old pensions may be in expensive, underperforming funds |
| High charges | Some older pensions charge 1–2% per year (vs 0.2–0.5% for modern schemes) |
| Difficult to plan | Hard to see your total retirement income across multiple pots |
| Duplicate admin | Multiple logins, statements, beneficiary nominations |
How to Find Lost Pensions
- Check old payslips and paperwork — employer names, pension provider names
- Contact previous employers — they can tell you which provider they used
- Use the Pension Tracing Service — free government service at gov.uk
- Pensions Dashboard — upcoming service to show all your pensions in one place
- Check your National Insurance record — employment history helps identify missing pensions
Should You Consolidate?
Benefits of Combining Pensions
| Benefit | Detail |
|---|---|
| Easier to manage | One login, one statement, one set of investments |
| Better investment choice | Modern SIPPs offer thousands of funds |
| Lower charges | Old pensions often charge more than modern alternatives |
| Clearer retirement planning | Know exactly what you have |
| Simpler for beneficiaries | Easier for family if something happens to you |
Risks of Consolidating
| Risk | Detail |
|---|---|
| Losing guaranteed benefits | Guaranteed annuity rates, guaranteed growth rates, protected retirement age |
| Exit fees | Some older pensions charge to transfer out (up to 5-10% for very old policies) |
| DB to DC transfer | Moving from a defined benefit scheme to a defined contribution pot — usually a bad idea |
| Out of the market | During transfer, your money may not be invested for several weeks |
When to Consolidate
| Situation | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Multiple small DC pots, no guarantees | Consolidate — simpler and likely cheaper |
| Old pensions with high charges (1%+) | Consolidate — save on charges |
| Small DC pots scattered across providers | Consolidate — easier to manage |
| Defined benefit pension | DON’T transfer without independent financial advice |
| Pension with guaranteed annuity rate | DON’T transfer — this is extremely valuable |
| Pension with protected early retirement age (pre-55 or pre-57) | DON’T transfer — you’d lose this |
| Employer still contributing | DON’T consolidate your current workplace pension — keep the employer contributions |
How to Consolidate
- Check for guarantees — call each pension provider and ask about any guaranteed benefits, protected features, or exit fees
- Choose your destination — a modern SIPP or workplace pension with low charges and good fund choice
- Initiate the transfer — your new provider handles the process (usually takes 4–8 weeks)
- Choose your investments — select funds appropriate for your age and risk appetite
Managing Multiple Pensions Without Consolidating
If consolidation isn’t right, you can still manage multiple pots effectively:
- Create a spreadsheet tracking each pension: provider, pot value, charges, expected retirement income
- Review annually — check performance and charges
- Update beneficiary nominations — ensure each pension knows who should inherit
- Keep records — provider name, policy number, login details
- Set calendar reminders — to check each pension once a year