Most people in the UK are not saving enough for retirement. The auto-enrolment minimum of 8% of qualifying earnings sounds like a reasonable amount, but for most people it will produce an income well below the standard of living they expect. Knowing whether your pension is on track — and what to do if it is not — requires three things: a rough target for your age, an honest look at what you currently have, and a plan if there is a gap.
This guide uses the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) retirement income standards and salary-multiple benchmarks to help you work out where you stand, with worked examples across different ages.
Step 1 — What Kind of Retirement Do You Want?
Before checking whether you’re on track, you need a target income. The PLSA publishes annual Retirement Living Standards — research-based estimates of what different lifestyle levels actually cost in the UK.
PLSA Retirement Living Standards 2025/26
| Lifestyle Level | Single Person | Couple |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum | £14,400/year | £22,400/year |
| Moderate | £31,300/year | £43,100/year |
| Comfortable | £43,100/year | £59,000/year |
Minimum covers all basic needs — food, utilities, housing costs — with some social activity but limited luxuries. A UK holiday, not international travel.
Moderate allows for more flexibility: eating out occasionally, a European holiday, a reliable car. This is what most people assume “a normal retirement” looks like.
Comfortable means regular luxuries, long-haul travel, home improvements, and meaningful financial gifts to family.
The figures above include State Pension income. That is important — it means your private pension only needs to top up to your target, not provide all of it.
Step 2 — How Much Does the State Pension Contribute?
The full new State Pension is worth approximately £11,973 per year (£230.25/week) in 2026/27. You qualify for the full amount with 35 qualifying years of National Insurance contributions. You can check your exact forecast using the Check Your State Pension service on gov.uk.
This single figure changes the maths dramatically. If your target retirement income is £25,000/year, and you receive the full State Pension, your private pension only needs to generate £13,027/year — not the full £25,000.
| Target Income | State Pension Contribution | Required from Private Pension | Pot Needed (4% rule) |
|---|---|---|---|
| £20,000/year | £11,973 | £8,027 | ~£200,000 |
| £25,000/year | £11,973 | £13,027 | ~£325,000 |
| £30,000/year | £11,973 | £18,027 | ~£450,000 |
| £35,000/year | £11,973 | £23,027 | ~£575,000 |
| £43,100/year (comfortable) | £11,973 | £31,127 | ~£778,000 |
The 4% rule is a commonly used withdrawal rate that research suggests sustains a pension pot for approximately 30 years. It is a planning guide, not a guarantee.
Step 3 — Are You on Track? Salary-Multiple Benchmarks
The simplest way to check your progress is the salary-multiple approach. The benchmark is how many times your current annual salary you should have saved in total (across all pensions, including workplace and any personal pensions) at each age.
| Age | Target Pension Pot | Example (£35,000 Salary) | Example (£50,000 Salary) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | 1× annual salary | £35,000 | £50,000 |
| 35 | 2× annual salary | £70,000 | £100,000 |
| 40 | 3× annual salary | £105,000 | £150,000 |
| 45 | 5× annual salary | £175,000 | £250,000 |
| 50 | 6× annual salary | £210,000 | £300,000 |
| 55 | 7× annual salary | £245,000 | £350,000 |
| 60 | 10× annual salary | £350,000 | £500,000 |
| 67 (State Pension age) | 10–13× annual salary | £350,000–£455,000 | £500,000–£650,000 |
These benchmarks assume you want a moderate retirement income, you will receive the full State Pension, and you retire at 67. If you want to retire earlier, earn more, or target a comfortable income, the targets are higher.
How to use this: Add up all your pension pots — workplace, old jobs, and any personal or SIPP pots. Find your age row. If your total is broadly in line with the target, you are broadly on track. If it is well below, read Step 5.
Step 4 — How to Find Out What You Actually Have
Your Workplace Pension
Check your employer’s pension portal, or look for your annual pension statement. This shows your current pot value and projected retirement income (based on assumed investment growth). The projection figure is useful but treat it as a guide — it is based on assumptions about future growth and contributions that may not hold.
Old Workplace Pensions
If you have changed jobs, you may have pension pots from previous employers. Use the gov.uk Pension Tracing Service to track down lost pots. The MoneyHelper Pension Dashboard (launching in stages through 2026) is designed to show all your pensions in one place.
Your State Pension
Log in to gov.uk/check-state-pension to see your current forecast. If you have gaps in your NI record (career breaks, time abroad, self-employment with low profits), you may be on track for less than the full amount. You can buy voluntary NI contributions to fill gaps — this is one of the most cost-effective financial decisions available to most UK adults.
Defined Benefit (Final Salary) Pensions
If you have a DB pension, your statement shows a projected annual income rather than a pot value. To compare with the salary-multiple benchmarks, you can roughly estimate the equivalent pot: multiply the projected annual income by 25. A DB pension forecast of £8,000/year is broadly equivalent in value to a private pot of £200,000.
Worked Examples
Example 1 — On Track at 42
Rachel earns £38,000 and has a current workplace pension pot of £95,000 from her current and previous employers combined. She expects the full State Pension.
- Target at age 42 (interpolating between 3× and 5×): approximately £130,000–£140,000
- Her pot: £95,000 — around £40,000 behind
She is not dramatically off track, but needs to increase contributions. She increases from 5% to 10% employee contributions, triggering a higher employer match. Her projected shortfall closes significantly within 5 years.
Example 2 — Behind at 50
Mark earns £42,000 and has only £60,000 saved across two old pensions. He has been contributing the auto-enrolment minimum throughout his career.
- Target at age 50: 6× salary = £252,000
- His pot: £60,000 — roughly £190,000 behind
With 17 years to State Pension age, Mark is significantly behind but not without options. He uses salary sacrifice to contribute 20% of his salary (employer continues at 5%), reducing his take-home by approximately £350/month but adding £700/month to his pension (tax relief and employer match included). Over 17 years with moderate growth, this could add £180,000–£220,000 to his pot. Combined with his current £60,000 growing over the same period, he reaches close to £300,000 — providing roughly £12,000/year from his private pension plus the full State Pension.
Example 3 — Starting Late at 55
Linda is 55 with only £25,000 saved. She earns £45,000. She is 12 years from State Pension age.
- Target at 55: 7× salary = £315,000
- Her pot: £25,000 — a large gap
Linda’s strategy shifts: she maximises pension contributions using salary sacrifice (up to 25% of salary), focuses on clearing any remaining mortgage, and plans to work until 68 to give the pension 13 years to grow. She also checks for NI gaps — buying a missing year costs approximately £900 and returns £330 per year in State Pension income indefinitely. She identifies three gap years and pays to fill them. Her plan, while not comfortable, is manageable.
Step 5 — What to Do If You’re Behind
Being behind is the norm, not the exception. The average UK pension pot at retirement is around £60,000–£80,000 — well below even a minimum lifestyle target. Here are the most effective levers.
1. Increase Employee Contributions
Every extra 1% you contribute typically costs less than 1% of your take-home pay because the contribution comes from pre-tax salary. For a higher-rate taxpayer, a 5% salary increase in contributions costs roughly 3% of take-home.
2. Maximise Employer Matching
Many employers match contributions above the minimum — for example, matching up to 5% if the employee contributes 5%. Not using this is leaving free money uncollected. Check your scheme rules.
3. Use Salary Sacrifice
Salary sacrifice reduces your gross pay, saving both income tax and National Insurance on the contribution. A basic-rate taxpayer gets 20% tax relief automatically; salary sacrifice adds a further 12% NI saving (making the effective cost 68p per £1 of pension contribution). For higher-rate taxpayers, the combined saving is even greater.
4. Track Down Lost Pensions
The average UK worker changes jobs 11 times. It is common to have small forgotten pension pots from previous employers. Finding and consolidating these costs nothing but admin time and can reveal meaningful hidden savings. Use the gov.uk Pension Tracing Service.
5. Buy Missing NI Years
Each additional qualifying year of NI contributions adds approximately £330/year to your State Pension (£11,973 ÷ 35 years). Buying a voluntary Class 3 contribution year costs around £900. If you receive State Pension for 3 or more years, you recover the cost — making this one of the best returns available with no investment risk.
6. Consider a Stocks and Shares ISA as a Bridge
For early retirement — retiring before State Pension age at 67 — a Stocks and Shares ISA can bridge the gap. Pension access age rises to 57 in 2028, but State Pension isn’t paid until 66–67. An ISA pot can fund those intervening years without touching your pension.
How Much Should You Be Contributing?
The standard rule of thumb: contribute half your age as a percentage of salary.
| Age | Suggested Total Contribution (Employee + Employer) |
|---|---|
| 25 | 12.5% of salary |
| 30 | 15% of salary |
| 35 | 17.5% of salary |
| 40 | 20% of salary |
| 45 | 22.5% of salary |
| 50 | 25% of salary |
The auto-enrolment minimum is 8% — significantly below this for most ages. If you are on the minimum and in your 30s, increasing to 12–15% total is the single highest-impact financial change most people can make.