Understanding the difference between the tax-free lump sum and drawdown is essential for planning how to access your pension.
Quick Comparison
Lump Sum vs Drawdown Overview
| Feature | Lump Sum (PCLS) | Drawdown |
|---|---|---|
| What is it | One-off cash payment | Ongoing flexible income |
| Tax treatment | 25% of pot is tax-free | All withdrawals taxed as income |
| Access | Single payment or phased | Any amount, any time |
| Pot remains invested | No (once taken) | Yes |
| Flexibility | One-time decision | Complete flexibility |
| Risk | Cash loses to inflation | Investment risk remains |
The Most Common Approach
Most people do both:
- Take 25% tax-free lump sum
- Move remaining 75% into drawdown
- Draw income as needed from drawdown
This gives you cash now plus ongoing income flexibility.
How Each Option Works
Taking Your 25% Lump Sum (PCLS)
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| 1. Request crystallisation | Tell provider you want to access pension |
| 2. Receive 25% tax-free | Cash paid to your bank account |
| 3. Remaining 75% | Goes to drawdown or annuity |
| 4. Future contributions | Triggers MPAA (£10,000 limit) |
Pension Drawdown
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| 1. Enter drawdown | Pension pot moves to drawdown account |
| 2. Choose income level | Take as much or little as you want |
| 3. Income is taxable | Added to your other income |
| 4. Pot stays invested | Continues to grow (or shrink) |
| 5. Adjust any time | Increase, decrease, or stop withdrawals |
Understanding Your Options
Option 1: Take 25% + Drawdown
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Tax-free cash | 25% of total pot |
| Remaining pot | 75% in drawdown |
| Income from drawdown | Taxable |
| Flexibility | High |
Example: £200,000 pot
- Tax-free lump sum: £50,000
- Remaining in drawdown: £150,000
- Draw £10,000/year: £10,000 added to taxable income
Option 2: UFPLS (No Separate Lump Sum)
Instead of taking 25% upfront, take ad-hoc lump sums. Each withdrawal is:
- 25% tax-free
- 75% taxable
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| No upfront lump sum | Pot stays uncrystallised |
| Each withdrawal | Part tax-free, part taxed |
| Flexibility | Very high |
| Best for | Occasional larger withdrawals |
Example: Take £20,000 UFPLS
- Tax-free: £5,000
- Taxable: £15,000
- If basic rate: ~£3,000 tax
- Net: ~£17,000
Option 3: Drawdown Only (No Lump Sum)
You can decline the 25% tax-free and put everything into drawdown.
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Tax-free cash | None (waived) |
| All in drawdown | 100% of pot |
| All withdrawals | Fully taxable |
| Why? | Maximum pot for growth + income |
Rarely done — usually better to take tax-free portion.
Option 4: Annuity Instead
Exchange your pot for guaranteed income for life.
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Can take 25% TF first | Yes |
| Remaining buys annuity | 75% x annuity rate |
| Income guaranteed | For life |
| Death | Usually stops or has limited guarantee |
| Flexibility | None |
Current annuity rates (2026, age 65):
| Pot Size | Monthly Income (Single Life) |
|---|---|
| £100,000 | ~£520-£570 |
| £150,000 | ~£780-£855 |
| £200,000 | ~£1,040-£1,140 |
Withdrawal Rate Comparison
Sustainable Drawdown Rates
How much can you safely withdraw without running out?
| Withdrawal Rate | Risk of Running Out (30 years) |
|---|---|
| 3% | Very low |
| 4% | Low |
| 5% | Moderate |
| 6% | High |
| 7%+ | Very high |
The 4% Rule: Traditional guideline suggests withdrawing 4% of pot initially, then adjusting for inflation.
| Pot Size | 4% Annual Withdrawal |
|---|---|
| £100,000 | £4,000 |
| £200,000 | £8,000 |
| £300,000 | £12,000 |
| £500,000 | £20,000 |
Drawdown vs Annuity Income
| Pot Value | Drawdown 4% | Annuity (Age 65) |
|---|---|---|
| £100,000 | £4,000/year | ~£6,500/year |
| £200,000 | £8,000/year | ~£13,000/year |
| £300,000 | £12,000/year | ~£19,500/year |
Annuity pays more but:
- Drawdown pot can grow
- Drawdown is flexible
- Drawdown can be inherited
Tax Implications
Tax on Drawdown Withdrawals
All drawdown income is taxed as earned income.
| Your Total Income | Tax Rate | On Drawdown |
|---|---|---|
| Under £12,570 | 0% | Tax-free |
| £12,570-£50,270 | 20% | Basic rate |
| £50,270-£125,140 | 40% | Higher rate |
| Over £125,140 | 45% | Additional rate |
Planning Withdrawals for Tax Efficiency
Example: Retired with £12,000 state pension
| Drawdown Amount | Total Income | Tax |
|---|---|---|
| £0 | £12,000 | £0 |
| £5,000 | £17,000 | £886 |
| £10,000 | £22,000 | £1,886 |
| £38,000 | £50,000 | £7,486 (at limit of basic rate) |
Optimal strategy: Draw up to the basic rate threshold (£50,270) to minimize tax.
Phased Crystallisation
You don’t have to crystallise your whole pension at once. Benefits:
- Take tax-free cash in stages
- Only trigger MPAA on crystallised portion
- Tax-efficient spreading
Example: £300,000 pot
| Year | Crystallise | Tax-Free (25%) | To Drawdown |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | £100,000 | £25,000 | £75,000 |
| 2 | £100,000 | £25,000 | £75,000 |
| 3 | £100,000 | £25,000 | £75,000 |
| Total | £300,000 | £75,000 | £225,000 |
Benefits:
- Three years of lower-taxed lump sum spending
- Uncrystallised portion keeps growing
- Flexibility maintained
Risk Comparison
Lump Sum Risks
| Risk | Impact |
|---|---|
| Inflation | Cash loses purchasing power |
| Overspending | Money gone too quickly |
| Poor returns | If invested outside pension |
| No growth | Cash doesn’t compound |
Drawdown Risks
| Risk | Impact |
|---|---|
| Investment losses | Pot value can fall |
| Taking too much | Run out of money |
| Living too long | Pot exhausted |
| Sequencing risk | Bad returns early harm pot |
| Market volatility | Stressful |
Sequencing Risk Explained
Where returns happen matters as much as average returns.
Example: £200,000 pot, £10,000/year withdrawal
| Scenario | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Pot After 3 Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Good early | +20% | +5% | -10% | £203,000 |
| Bad early | -10% | +5% | +20% | £185,000 |
Same average return (5%) but different outcome due to withdrawal timing.
When Each Option Suits Best
Take Maximum 25% Lump Sum If:
| Situation | Why It Suits |
|---|---|
| Need cash for specific purpose | Mortgage, debt, deposit for child |
| Have other guaranteed income | State pension, DB pension cover basics |
| Poor health | Access money while you can |
| High pension fees | Remove from expensive fund |
| Want to invest yourself | ISA, property, etc. |
Prioritise Drawdown If:
| Situation | Why It Suits |
|---|---|
| Need regular income | Replaces salary |
| Good health | Time for pot to recover dips |
| Comfortable with investment | Understand risk |
| Want flexibility | Vary income as needed |
| Inheritance important | Pot passes to beneficiaries |
Consider UFPLS If:
| Situation | Why It Suits |
|---|---|
| Occasional larger needs | E.g., annual holidays |
| Tax planning | Keep pot uncrystallised |
| Multiple small pots | Cash out under small pot rules |
| Don’t want regular income | Just need access sometimes |
Practical Examples
Example 1: Early Retiree (Age 57)
Situation: £400,000 pot, no other income, wants to bridge to state pension
| Element | Amount |
|---|---|
| Take 25% tax-free | £100,000 |
| Into drawdown | £300,000 |
| Annual drawdown (8 years to SP) | £15,000 |
| Tax on £15,000 | ~£500 |
| State pension starts (67) | £12,000/year |
| Reduce drawdown then | £8,000/year |
Example 2: Comfortable Pensioner (Age 65)
Situation: £200,000 DC pot, £15,000 DB pension already, wants income top-up
| Element | Amount |
|---|---|
| DB pension | £15,000/year |
| State pension | £12,000/year |
| Total guaranteed | £27,000/year |
| Take 25% TF | £50,000 (for home improvements) |
| Drawdown | £150,000 |
| Monthly supplement | £500/month (£6,000/year) |
| Years pot lasts (4%) | 25+ years |
Example 3: Part-Time Worker (Age 55)
Situation: £150,000 pot, still working 3 days/week earning £20,000
| Approach | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Don’t crystallise yet | Would trigger MPAA |
| Keep contributing | Build larger pot |
| Wait until fully retired | Then take lump sum + drawdown |
| UFPLS if needed | For emergencies only |
Combining Strategies
Blended Approach
| Age | Strategy |
|---|---|
| 55-60 | Work part-time, leave pension growing |
| 60-67 | Phased crystallisation, tax-efficient drawdown |
| 67+ | State pension starts, reduce drawdown |
| 75+ | Review for care needs/inheritance |
Multiple Pensions
| Pension | Strategy |
|---|---|
| Main DC pot | Drawdown for regular income |
| Old workplace pension | Take 25% TF, consolidate rest |
| Small pots (<£10k) | Cash out entirely |
| DB pension | Take if offered, otherwise collect income |
Getting It Right
Questions to Answer Before Deciding
- What’s my total guaranteed income? (State pension + DB + annuity)
- What income gap do I need to fill?
- Do I have specific one-off needs?
- What’s my risk tolerance?
- What are my inheritance priorities?
- Am I still contributing to pensions?
Professional Advice
Consider paying for advice if:
- Pension pot over £100,000
- Unsure about investment risk
- Complex tax situation
- Have DB pension with transfer value
- Want comprehensive retirement plan