Pensions & Retirement

Pension Lump Sum vs Drawdown UK 2026 — Which Is Better?

Compare taking your 25% pension lump sum versus pension drawdown. How each option works, tax implications, flexibility, and which suits your retirement plans.

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 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:

  1. Take 25% tax-free lump sum
  2. Move remaining 75% into drawdown
  3. 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

  1. What’s my total guaranteed income? (State pension + DB + annuity)
  2. What income gap do I need to fill?
  3. Do I have specific one-off needs?
  4. What’s my risk tolerance?
  5. What are my inheritance priorities?
  6. 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

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Pension drawdown
  2. MoneyHelper — Drawdown explained