Pensions & Retirement

How Pension Tax Relief Works — 20%, 40%, 45% Explained

Complete guide to pension tax relief in the UK. How it works at basic, higher, and additional rates, salary sacrifice, annual allowance, and how to claim the extra relief.

Pension information is based on current UK legislation. Pensions are regulated by the FCA and The Pensions Regulator. This is not financial advice — consider consulting an FCA-regulated financial adviser.

Pension tax relief is one of the most valuable tax breaks available in the UK. Here is exactly how it works at every tax rate.

How Pension Tax Relief Works

Your tax rateYou contributeTax relief addedTotal in your pensionEffective cost to you
Basic rate (20%)£80£20 (automatic)£100£80
Higher rate (40%)£80£20 (automatic) + £20 (claimed back)£100£60
Additional rate (45%)£80£20 (automatic) + £25 (claimed back)£100£55
Non-taxpayer£80£20 (automatic)£100£80

For every £100 in your pension, a higher rate taxpayer only pays £60 out of pocket.

Step by Step: How the Relief Is Applied

Method 1: Relief at Source (Most Personal Pensions, SIPPs)

StepWhat happens
1You contribute £80 from your bank account
2Your pension provider claims 20% basic rate relief from HMRC
3£100 appears in your pension
4If you are a higher rate taxpayer, you claim the extra 20% via self-assessment
5HMRC refunds £20 (either as a tax refund or by adjusting your tax code)
Net cost to basic rate taxpayer£80
Net cost to higher rate taxpayer£60
Net cost to additional rate taxpayer£55

Method 2: Net Pay Arrangement (Most Workplace Pensions)

StepWhat happens
1Your employer deducts your pension contribution from your gross salary BEFORE calculating tax
2You pay less income tax automatically
3No need to claim — the relief is given through your payroll
4Check your payslip — your taxable pay should be reduced by your pension contribution

If your workplace pension uses net pay, you get full relief automatically — no need to claim. Check your payslip to see which method your employer uses.

Method 3: Salary Sacrifice

StepWhat happens
1You agree to reduce your salary by the pension contribution amount
2Your employer pays the full amount directly into your pension
3You save income tax AND National Insurance (8%)
4Your employer saves NI too (13.8%) — some pass this saving into your pension

Salary Sacrifice — The Extra Benefit

DetailRegular contributionSalary sacrifice
Gross salary£50,000£50,000
Pension contribution£5,000 (from net pay)£5,000 (salary reduced to £45,000)
Income tax saved£1,000 (20% relief)£1,000 (20% on lower salary)
NI saved (employee)£0£400 (8% of £5,000)
NI saved (employer)£0£690 (13.8% of £5,000)
Total tax/NI saving£1,000£2,090 (if employer passes on their NI saving)

Salary sacrifice saves an extra £400+ in NI per £5,000 contributed — ask your employer if it is available.

Annual Allowance

Detail2026/27
Standard annual allowance£60,000
IncludesYour contributions + employer contributions + tax relief
Earnings cap100% of your UK earnings (if less than £60,000)
Non-earner contributionUp to £3,600 gross (£2,880 net + £720 tax relief)
Carry forwardUnused allowance from previous 3 tax years
Tax charge if exceededExcess taxed at your marginal income tax rate

Tapered Annual Allowance (High Earners)

Adjusted incomeAnnual allowance
Up to £260,000£60,000 (full)
£260,001–£360,000Reduced by £1 for every £2 over £260,000
Over £360,000£10,000 (minimum)

Carry Forward — Using Previous Years’ Allowance

Tax yearUnused allowanceCan carry forward?
2023/24e.g. £20,000 unusedYes (expires after 2026/27)
2024/25e.g. £30,000 unusedYes (expires after 2027/28)
2025/26e.g. £15,000 unusedYes (expires after 2028/29)
Total available in 2026/27£60,000 + £65,000 = £125,000

You must have been a member of a pension scheme in each carry-forward year (even if you contributed nothing).

How to Claim Higher Rate Relief

MethodWhen to use
Self-assessment tax returnIf you already file one — enter pension contributions in the relevant section
Contact HMRC by phoneIf you do not file a self-assessment — call 0300 200 3300
Write to HMRCLetter with details of your contributions and the tax year
Tax code adjustmentHMRC may adjust your code so you get the relief spread over the year (if ongoing contributions)

Self-Assessment: Where to Enter Pension Contributions

BoxWhat to enter
Personal pension contributions (relief at source)The GROSS amount (including the 20% already claimed by your provider)
Employer pension contributionsEntered separately — you do not get additional tax relief on these
Total contributionsCheck this does not exceed your annual allowance

Example: Claiming Higher Rate Relief

DetailAmount
You contribute £4,000 net to a SIPP£4,000
Provider claims 20% basic rate relief£1,000
Gross contribution£5,000
You report £5,000 on your self-assessment
HMRC extends your basic rate band by £5,000
Additional tax relief (20% of £5,000)£1,000
Refund received (or tax code adjusted)£1,000
Total in your pension£5,000
Actual cost to you£3,000

Common Mistakes

MistakeCost
Higher rate taxpayer not claiming extra reliefLost £100s–£1,000s per year
Not using salary sacrifice when availableMissing NI savings
Exceeding annual allowanceTax charge at your marginal rate on the excess
Contributing more than your earningsTax relief only applies up to 100% of your earnings
Not carrying forward unused allowanceMissing opportunity for large one-off contributions
Non-earning spouse not contributingThey can contribute up to £2,880 net and get £720 tax relief
Assuming workplace net pay = relief at sourceThey work differently — check your payslip

Tax Relief If You Don’t Earn

SituationMaximum contribution (gross)Maximum contribution (net)Tax relief
Non-earner (child, student, stay-at-home parent)£3,600£2,880£720 (20%)
Partner can contribute on your behalfYes — into your pension
Children’s pensionYes — £2,880 net, £3,600 grossGrows tax-free for decades

Contributing £2,880 to a child’s pension means £3,600 invested with decades of growth ahead — a powerful long-term gift.

How Pension Tax Relief Compares to ISA

FeaturePensionISA
Tax relief going in20–45%None
Tax on withdrawals75% taxed as income (25% tax-free)None
NI saving (salary sacrifice)YesNo
Employer contributionsYesNo
Access age55 (57 from 2028)Any time
Annual limit£60,000£20,000

For most working people, pension first (for the tax relief and employer match), ISA second (for flexibility).

Related guides:

Sources

  1. HMRC — Tax on your pension
  2. HMRC — Tax relief on pension contributions