Pensions & Retirement

State Pension and Working — Do You Still Pay Tax and NI?

Complete guide to working while claiming state pension. Learn about tax, National Insurance, how employment affects your pension, and whether to defer.

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.

Working while receiving state pension is increasingly common. Here’s how it affects your tax, National Insurance, and take home pay.

Key Rules for Working After State Pension Age

Rule Details
Can you work and claim state pension? Yes — no earnings limit or restrictions
Do you pay income tax? Yes — state pension is taxable income
Do you pay employee NI? No — exempt after State Pension age
Does your employer pay NI? Yes — employer NI still applies
Does working increase your state pension? Only if you have fewer than 35 qualifying years
Can you choose to defer instead? Yes — see our deferral guide

How Tax Works When You’re Working and Claiming

State pension is paid gross (no tax deducted). Instead, HMRC adjusts your employment tax code to collect tax on both your earnings and state pension through your wages.

Example: £15,000 Job + Full State Pension

Income source Annual amount
Employment earnings £15,000
New State Pension £11,973
Total income £26,973
Tax calculation Amount
Personal Allowance £12,570
Taxable income £14,403
Income tax at 20% £2,881
Employee NI £0 (exempt)
Total take home £24,092

Your tax code would be adjusted to something like K51 or similar, meaning extra tax is collected from your wages to cover the tax due on your state pension.

Common Tax Codes for Pensioners Working

Situation Likely tax code What it means
Job + state pension, tax on both collected through job K code (e.g. K251) Extra tax collected from wages
Job under Personal Allowance, SP under PA 1257L (split) Allowance split between sources
Multiple jobs + pension Various HMRC splits allowance across sources
Job only, deferring pension 1257L Standard code

If your tax code looks wrong, contact HMRC on 0300 200 3300. Incorrect codes are common when you start claiming pension alongside employment.

The National Insurance Advantage

The biggest financial benefit of working past State Pension age is the NI exemption:

Salary Employee NI (under SP age) Employee NI (over SP age) Annual saving
£15,000 £194 £0 £194
£20,000 £594 £0 £594
£25,000 £994 £0 £994
£30,000 £1,394 £0 £1,394
£40,000 £2,194 £0 £2,194

This NI saving applies regardless of whether you’re claiming your state pension or deferring it. The exemption begins from the day after you reach State Pension age.

Your employer still pays 15% employer NI on your earnings above £5,000.

Take Home Pay Comparison: Working at 50 vs 68

On a £25,000 salary, comparing a 50-year-old employee with a 68-year-old claiming full state pension:

Age 50 (no pension) Age 68 (with state pension)
Salary £25,000 £25,000
State Pension £0 £11,973
Total income £25,000 £36,973
Income tax £2,486 £4,881
Employee NI £994 £0
Total take home £21,520 £32,092

The 68-year-old has £10,572 more take home — £11,973 from state pension minus £2,395 extra tax, plus £994 NI saved.

Does Extra Work Increase Your State Pension?

Your NI record Does more work help?
Under 10 qualifying years Yes — crucial to reach minimum
10–34 qualifying years Yes — each year adds ~£6.58/week pension
35+ qualifying years No — you already qualify for the full amount
Deferring pension Yes — but through deferral increase, not NI record

If you already have 35 qualifying years, the only way to increase your state pension through work is by deferring — which adds ~5.8% per year.

Self-Employment After State Pension Age

Self-employed workers past State Pension age:

Obligation Required?
Class 2 NI No — exempt after SP age
Class 4 NI No — exempt after SP age
Income tax Yes — same as employees
Self Assessment Yes — if self-employed income requires it

The NI savings for self-employed workers are also significant:

Self-employed profit Class 2 + Class 4 NI (under SP age) NI (over SP age) Saving
£30,000 £179 + £1,394 = £1,573 £0 £1,573
£50,000 £179 + £2,994 = £3,173 £0 £3,173

Should You Claim or Defer While Working?

Your situation Recommendation
Earning under £12,570 Claim — pension fits within Personal Allowance
Earning £12,570–£50,270 Either — pension will be taxed at 20%. Deferring adds 5.8%/year
Earning £50,270+ Consider deferral — pension would be taxed at 40%
Earning £100,000+ Strongly consider deferral — pension could trigger 60% effective rate
Need the money Claim — don’t defer if you need income

See our full State Pension Deferral guide for break-even calculations.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Working after State Pension age