Pensions & Retirement
State Pension Increase 2026/27 UK — How Much Will You Get?
State pension rates for 2026/27 after the triple lock increase. New and basic state pension amounts, how much extra you'll receive, and when the rise takes effect.
The state pension increased in April 2026 under the triple lock guarantee. Here’s exactly how much you’ll receive.
State Pension Rates 2026/27
New State Pension Rates
| Rate |
Weekly |
Monthly |
Annual |
| Full new state pension |
£232.15 |
£1,007 |
£12,082 |
| Increase from 2025/26 |
+£9.15 |
+£40 |
+£476 |
| Percentage increase |
4.1% |
4.1% |
4.1% |
Basic State Pension Rates
| Rate |
Weekly |
Monthly |
Annual |
| Full basic state pension |
£177.90 |
£772 |
£9,256 |
| Increase from 2025/26 |
+£7.00 |
+£30 |
+£364 |
| Percentage increase |
4.1% |
4.1% |
4.1% |
When You Get Each Type
| Type |
Who Gets It |
| New state pension |
Reached state pension age after 5 April 2016 |
| Basic state pension |
Reached state pension age before 6 April 2016 |
How the 2026 Increase Was Calculated
| Measure |
September 2025 Figure |
Used for Increase? |
| Average earnings growth |
4.1% |
✓ Yes (highest) |
| CPI inflation |
3.2% |
No |
| Minimum guarantee |
2.5% |
No |
The triple lock takes the highest of these three figures.
Historical Triple Lock Decisions
| Year |
Increase |
Based On |
| April 2022 |
3.1% |
CPI (earnings suspended due to COVID distortions) |
| April 2023 |
10.1% |
CPI inflation |
| April 2024 |
8.5% |
Earnings growth |
| April 2025 |
4.1% |
Earnings growth |
| April 2026 |
4.1% |
Earnings growth |
Your State Pension Amount
Not Everyone Gets the Full Amount
Your state pension depends on your National Insurance record.
| NI Years |
% of Full State Pension |
Weekly Amount (New SP) |
| 35+ years |
100% |
£232.15 |
| 30 years |
86% |
£199.65 |
| 25 years |
71% |
£164.83 |
| 20 years |
57% |
£132.33 |
| 15 years |
43% |
£99.82 |
| 10 years |
29% |
£67.32 |
| Under 10 years |
0% |
£0 |
Minimum: You need at least 10 qualifying years to get any new state pension.
Check Your State Pension Forecast
Visit GOV.UK to check your personal amount:
- Go to gov.uk/check-state-pension
- Sign in with Government Gateway
- View your forecast and NI record
Additional State Pension Components
If You’re on Basic State Pension
You may also receive:
| Component |
Possible Amount |
What It Is |
| Additional state pension (SERPS/S2P) |
Varies |
Based on earnings history |
| Graduated retirement benefit |
Small amounts |
Old pre-1975 scheme |
| Over 80 pension |
£106.74/week |
If you have little/no other pension |
Protected Payment
If you had high additional state pension before 2016:
| Situation |
Outcome |
| Entitlement exceeded £232.15/week |
Get ‘protected payment’ on top |
| Inflation protection |
Protected payment increases with triple lock |
State Pension Compared to Living Costs
Is the State Pension Enough?
| Item |
Monthly Cost |
State Pension % Used |
| Average rent (UK, 1-bed) |
£750 |
74% |
| Council tax (Band D) |
£175 |
17% |
| Energy bills |
£125 |
12% |
| Food/groceries |
£300 |
30% |
| Basic costs |
£1,350 |
134% |
The full state pension alone doesn’t cover average basic living costs — highlighting the need for private pension savings.
Pension Credit Top-Up
If your income is low, Pension Credit can help:
| Status |
Weekly Guarantee |
Annual |
| Single |
£218.15 |
£11,347 |
| Couple |
£332.95 |
£17,327 |
If your income (including state pension) is below these levels, you may qualify for Pension Credit.
Payment Dates
When You’ll Be Paid
State pension is usually paid every 4 weeks in arrears.
| Your payment day |
Based on |
| Specific day each 4 weeks |
Last 2 digits of your NI number |
Example payment schedule:
| NI Number Ends |
Payment Day |
| 00-19 |
Monday |
| 20-39 |
Tuesday |
| 40-59 |
Wednesday |
| 60-79 |
Thursday |
| 80-99 |
Friday |
April 2026 Payment Dates
| Payment Date |
Period Covered |
| 7-11 April 2026 |
First payment at new rate |
| Previous payments |
At 2025/26 rate |
The new rate applies from 7 April 2026 — your first payment at the new rate depends on your payment schedule.
State Pension Increase History
Recent Years
| Year |
New State Pension (Full) |
Annual Increase |
| 2020/21 |
£175.20/week |
3.9% |
| 2021/22 |
£179.60/week |
2.5% |
| 2022/23 |
£185.15/week |
3.1% |
| 2023/24 |
£203.85/week |
10.1% |
| 2024/25 |
£221.20/week |
8.5% |
| 2025/26 |
£223.00/week |
4.1% |
| 2026/27 |
£232.15/week |
4.1% |
Cumulative Increase (Since 2020)
| Period |
Percentage |
Cash Increase |
| 2020 to 2026 |
32.5% |
£57/week |
| 2020 to 2026 (annual) |
+£2,964/year |
|
Future of the Triple Lock
Government Commitment
| Status |
Detail |
| Current policy |
Triple lock guaranteed for this Parliament |
| Manifesto pledge |
Maintain triple lock |
| Potential changes |
Under review due to cost pressures |
Triple Lock Cost to Government
| Year |
State Pension Cost (approx) |
| 2023/24 |
£124 billion |
| 2024/25 |
£137 billion |
| 2025/26 |
£145 billion |
| 2026/27 |
£151 billion (est) |
What If You’re Not Getting the Full Amount?
Options to Increase Your State Pension
| Option |
How It Works |
Cost |
| Buy NI years |
Voluntary Class 3 contributions |
£17.45/week per year bought |
| Work longer |
Gain more qualifying years |
Earnings-dependent |
| Check for gaps |
Years you could fill |
Varies |
| Claim NI credits |
Caring, unemployment, etc. |
Free |
Is Buying NI Years Worth It?
Example calculation:
| Factor |
Amount |
| Cost of 1 year (Class 3) |
£907.40 |
| Extra pension per year |
£345 (approx) |
| Years to break even |
2.6 years |
| Average retirement length |
20+ years |
| Total extra pension |
£6,900+ |
For most people, buying qualifying years is excellent value.
Deadline for Buying Years
| Tax Year |
Deadline to Buy |
| 2006/07 to 2015/16 |
5 April 2025 (extended deadline ended) |
| 2016/17 onwards |
Usually 6 years to buy back |
| 2020/21 |
By 5 April 2027 |
| 2021/22 |
By 5 April 2028 |
Tax on State Pension
Is State Pension Taxable?
| Question |
Answer |
| Is it taxable? |
Yes — counts as income |
| Is tax deducted at source? |
No — paid gross |
| How is tax collected? |
Through PAYE on other income, or self-assessment |
Tax Example
| Income Source |
Amount |
| State pension |
£12,082 |
| Private pension |
£10,000 |
| Total income |
£22,082 |
| Personal allowance |
-£12,570 |
| Taxable |
£9,512 |
| Tax at 20% |
£1,902 |
If state pension is your only income, you’re below the personal allowance — no tax due.
Key Actions
Check Your Forecast
- Visit gov.uk/check-state-pension
- Review your NI record for gaps
- Consider buying missing years
- Plan additional retirement income
If You’re Near State Pension Age
- Claim 4 months before your birthday
- Decide whether to defer (increases pension)
- Provide bank details for payment
- Consider Pension Credit if income is low