Pensions & Retirement

Pension Lump Sum Calculator UK 2026 — How Much Tax-Free Cash Can You Get?

Calculate your pension tax-free lump sum. How much you can take from defined contribution, final salary, and state pensions. 25% rule, limits, and worked examples.

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.

Understanding how much tax-free cash you can get from your pension is essential for retirement planning. Here’s how to calculate it for every type of pension.

Tax-Free Lump Sum Basics

The 25% Rule

Rule Detail
Standard entitlement 25% of pension pot
Tax-free portion Entire 25%
Maximum tax-free (lifetime) £268,275
When can you access From age 55 (rising to 57 in 2028)
Applies to Most defined contribution pensions

Key Limits 2026/27

Limit Amount
Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) £268,275
Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA) £1,073,100

The LSA is the maximum tax-free cash you can take across all your pensions during your lifetime. The LSDBA includes death benefits as well.

Defined Contribution Pension Calculator

Simple 25% Calculation

Pension Pot Value Tax-Free Lump Sum (25%)
£50,000 £12,500
£100,000 £25,000
£150,000 £37,500
£200,000 £50,000
£300,000 £75,000
£400,000 £100,000
£500,000 £125,000
£750,000 £187,500
£1,000,000 £250,000
£1,073,100+ £268,275 (max)

What’s Left After Taking Lump Sum

Pot Size Tax-Free (25%) Remaining (75%)
£100,000 £25,000 £75,000
£200,000 £50,000 £150,000
£300,000 £75,000 £225,000
£500,000 £125,000 £375,000

The remaining 75% can be:

  • Left invested (drawdown)
  • Taken as taxable income over time
  • Used to buy an annuity
  • Taken all at once (heavily taxed)

Defined Benefit (Final Salary) Pension Calculator

How It Works

Final salary pensions are more complex. The tax-free lump sum is based on the “capital value” of the pension.

Capital value formula: Capital Value = Annual Pension × 20 (typical multiplier)

Tax-free lump sum: Maximum = 25% of Capital Value

Calculation Examples

Annual Pension Capital Value (×20) Max Tax-Free Lump Sum
£10,000 £200,000 £50,000
£15,000 £300,000 £75,000
£20,000 £400,000 £100,000
£25,000 £500,000 £125,000
£30,000 £600,000 £150,000
£40,000 £800,000 £200,000
£50,000 £1,000,000 £250,000

Commutation: Trading Pension for Lump Sum

Most defined benefit schemes let you “commute” some pension for extra lump sum.

Typical commutation rate: £12-£20 of lump sum per £1 of annual pension given up

Example:

  • Starting pension: £20,000/year
  • Standard lump sum: £60,000 (3× pension)
  • Want maximum lump sum: £100,000
  • Extra lump sum needed: £40,000
  • At 12:1 commutation: Give up £3,333/year pension
  • Reduced pension: £16,667/year
Option Lump Sum Annual Pension
Standard (3× pension) £60,000 £20,000
Maximum (25% of value) £100,000 £16,667
No lump sum £0 £22,000 (approx)

Is Commutation Worth It?

Factor Favours Lump Sum Favours Higher Pension
Life expectancy Poor health Good health
Other income Need cash now Have other sources
Inflation protection Pension isn’t indexed Pension is index-linked
Inheritance Want to pass on wealth N/A
Tax position Higher rate taxpayer Basic rate taxpayer

Multiple Pensions

Calculating Total Tax-Free Entitlement

If you have several pensions, each has its own 25% entitlement, but the total is capped at £268,275.

Example: Three pensions

Pension Value 25% Entitlement
Workplace DC £150,000 £37,500
Old employer DC £80,000 £20,000
SIPP £200,000 £50,000
Total £430,000 £107,500

Total is under £268,275, so full amount is tax-free.

Example: Large pensions

Pension Value 25% Entitlement
Final salary (value) £800,000 £200,000
DC pension £400,000 £100,000
Total entitlement £300,000
LSA limit £268,275
Tax-free amount £268,275
Taxable excess £31,725

The £31,725 excess would be taxed as income.

Small Pot Rules

Taking Small Pots Entirely

Pensions under certain limits can be taken entirely with only 25% tax-free:

Small Pot Rule Limit Tax-Free Taxable
Trivial commutation (DB) £30,000 total 25% 75%
Small pot (DC) £10,000 each 25% 75%
Number of small pots 3 maximum

Example: Small pot

  • Pension pot: £8,000
  • Tax-free portion: £2,000 (25%)
  • Taxable portion: £6,000 (75%)

Small Pot Advantages

  • Doesn’t affect your Money Purchase Annual Allowance
  • Doesn’t count towards Lump Sum Allowance
  • Quick way to consolidate small pensions
  • Up to 3 small pots can be treated this way

Tax on Amounts Over 25%

How Additional Withdrawals Are Taxed

Anything beyond the 25% tax-free is added to your income for the year.

2026/27 Income Tax Rates:

Band Rate On Income
Personal allowance 0% Up to £12,570
Basic rate 20% £12,571-£50,270
Higher rate 40% £50,271-£125,140
Additional rate 45% Over £125,140

Tax Calculation Examples

Example 1: Basic rate taxpayer

Item Amount
Other income £25,000
Pension withdrawal (total) £40,000
Tax-free (25%) -£10,000
Taxable pension £30,000
Total taxable income £55,000
Tax: £12,570 at 0% £0
Tax: £37,700 at 20% £7,540
Tax: £4,730 at 40% £1,892
Total tax on withdrawal £9,432

Example 2: Taking full pot

Item Amount
Pension pot £100,000
Tax-free (25%) £25,000
Taxable £75,000
Other income £0
Tax calculation:
£12,570 at 0% £0
£37,700 at 20% £7,540
£24,730 at 40% £9,892
Total tax £17,432
Net received £82,568

Phased Withdrawal Calculator

Taking Lump Sums Over Multiple Years

Strategy: Take smaller amounts each year to stay in lower tax bands.

Example: £200,000 pot, no other income

Year Withdrawal Tax-Free Taxable Tax Net
1 £50,000 £12,500 £37,500 £4,986 £45,014
2 £50,000 £12,500 £37,500 £4,986 £45,014
3 £50,000 £12,500 £37,500 £4,986 £45,014
4 £50,000 £12,500 £37,500 £4,986 £45,014
Total £200,000 £50,000 £150,000 £19,944 £180,056

vs Taking all at once:

Item Amount
Total pot £200,000
Tax-free £50,000
Taxable £150,000
Tax (pushed into higher bands) £42,430
Net received £157,570

Saving from phasing: £22,486

UFPLS (Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum)

How UFPLS Works

Instead of taking 25% tax-free and then separate taxable amounts, UFPLS lets you take ad-hoc lump sums where each one is:

  • 25% tax-free
  • 75% taxable

Example: £10,000 UFPLS withdrawal

  • Tax-free: £2,500
  • Taxable: £7,500
  • If basic rate: £1,500 tax
  • Net: £8,500

UFPLS vs Drawdown

Feature UFPLS Drawdown
Flexibility Per withdrawal Separate tax-free and income
Tax-free timing With each withdrawal Usually upfront
Remaining pot Stays uncrystallised Crystallised (counts for MPAA)
Good for Occasional withdrawals Regular income

Pension Commencement Lump Sum (PCLS)

What Is PCLS?

PCLS is the technical name for the 25% tax-free lump sum when you “crystallise” (access) your pension.

Term Meaning
PCLS Pension Commencement Lump Sum
Crystallise Move pension from growth phase to access phase
Uncrystallised Pension you haven’t accessed yet
Crystallised Pension you’ve started taking from

PCLS Decision Points

When taking PCLS:

  • Must be at least 55 (57 from 2028)
  • Can take from one or multiple pensions
  • Each pension can only be crystallised once
  • Triggers Money Purchase Annual Allowance (£10,000)

State Pension

The state pension has no tax-free lump sum option.

State Pension Fact Detail
Full new state pension 2026/27 £12,082/year
Tax-free lump sum None
All state pension is Taxable income
Uses personal allowance Yes (if under £12,570)

Calculator Summary

Quick Reference Table

Pension Type Tax-Free Calculation
Defined Contribution 25% of pot value
Defined Benefit 25% of capital value (usually 20× annual pension)
Small pot (<£10,000 DC) 25% of pot
UFPLS withdrawal 25% of each withdrawal
Maximum tax-free lifetime £268,275
State pension None

Planning Checklist

  1. Calculate total pension values
  2. Work out 25% of each
  3. Check against £268,275 limit
  4. Consider tax on amounts over 25%
  5. Model phased withdrawal if near tax thresholds
  6. Factor in other income in retirement years
  7. Consider whether lump sum or higher income suits you better

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Tax on your private pension
  2. MoneyHelper — Taking your pension as a cash lump sum