Pension Tax UK 2026/27 — Relief, Annual Allowance, Tax-Free Cash and Drawdown

Pension Allowance 2026/27 — Annual Allowance, Lump Sum Limits & Tax Relief

Complete guide to pension allowances for 2026/27 tax year. Annual allowance, tax-free lump sum limits, Money Purchase Annual Allowance, carry forward rules, and how to maximise your pension contributions.

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.

Contents

Pension rules changed significantly in April 2024 when the government abolished the Lifetime Allowance — a cap that had limited the total amount anyone could hold in pensions tax-efficiently. That change opened up substantial new opportunities for high earners and older workers to contribute more aggressively. For 2026/27, the key limits are the £60,000 Annual Allowance and the £268,275 Lump Sum Allowance.

Understanding these rules matters both for people building their pension and those approaching retirement. Getting contributions right can save tens of thousands of pounds in tax.

Pension Allowances 2026/27 — Quick Reference

Allowance Amount What It Limits
Annual Allowance £60,000 Total yearly contributions
Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA) £10,000 After flexible access
Tapered Annual Allowance (minimum) £10,000 High earners (over £260,000)
Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) £268,275 Tax-free lump sums
Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA) £1,073,100 Combined lump sums + death benefits

Annual Allowance — £60,000

The Annual Allowance is the maximum amount that can be paid into your pensions in a single tax year — from all sources combined — while still qualifying for tax relief. It is not just your own contributions that count: your employer’s contributions and any salary sacrifice also eat into this figure.

For most people, the £60,000 limit is comfortably above what they contribute in any given year. The average UK pension contribution is well below this. But for higher earners, those receiving generous employer contributions on top of their own, and those trying to make a large one-off contribution (perhaps from a bonus or inheritance), understanding the Annual Allowance becomes essential.

One important constraint: even if your Annual Allowance is £60,000, you cannot claim tax relief on contributions above 100% of your earnings in a given year. If you earn £40,000, the maximum tax-relieved contribution is £40,000 — not £60,000.

The one exception to the earnings rule is a small non-earner contribution. People with no relevant UK earnings can still contribute up to £3,600 gross per year (£2,880 net) and receive basic rate tax relief. This can be useful for a non-working spouse whose partner is a higher or additional rate taxpayer.

What Counts Towards the Annual Allowance?

Contribution Type Counts?
Your personal contributions Yes
Employer contributions Yes
Salary sacrifice contributions Yes
Defined benefit pension accrual Yes (calculated differently — see below)
State Pension No

Annual Allowance Rules

Rule Detail
Maximum £60,000 (or 100% of earnings if lower)
Minimum for non-earners £3,600 gross (£2,880 net)
Employer contributions Unlimited, but still count towards your allowance
Tax charge on excess Your marginal income tax rate

Carry Forward — Use Previous Years’ Unused Allowance

If you have not used your full Annual Allowance in previous years, you may be able to carry forward the unused amounts. This can allow you to make a single large pension contribution well in excess of £60,000 — potentially up to £240,000 if you have carried forward three full years of unused allowance.

Carry forward is particularly valuable in specific situations: receiving a large bonus, selling a business, inheriting money, or deliberately boosting your pension in the years before retirement. It is also a powerful tool for those who want to reduce a tax bill near the end of the tax year.

To use carry forward, you must have been a member of a registered pension scheme during the years you are carrying forward from. You do not need to have contributed in those years — just been a member. You also need to use the current year’s full £60,000 allowance before drawing on carry forward.

Carry Forward Rules

Rule Detail
Years available Previous 3 tax years
Requirement Must have been a pension scheme member each year
Order of use Current year’s allowance is used first
Maximum with carry forward £60,000 × 4 years = up to £240,000 in a single year

Carry Forward Example

Suppose you have contributed modestly to your pension in recent years but received a large bonus in 2026/27. Here is how carry forward could work:

Tax Year Allowance Used Unused
2023/24 £60,000 £10,000 £50,000
2024/25 £60,000 £8,000 £52,000
2025/26 £60,000 £12,000 £48,000
2026/27 £60,000 £60,000
Total available 2026/27 £210,000

In this scenario, someone could contribute up to £210,000 to their pension in 2026/27 and receive tax relief on the full amount — as long as it does not exceed their earnings.

Who Should Use Carry Forward?

Situation Why Carry Forward Helps
Large bonus this year Shelter earnings from income tax by contributing to pension
Earning over £100,000 Contributing restores the Personal Allowance (tapered above £100,000)
Inheritance received One-time large sum sheltered from tax long-term
Business sale proceeds Tax-efficiently invest proceeds
Approaching retirement Maximise pension pot in final working years

Tapered Annual Allowance — High Earners

For very high earners, the Annual Allowance is progressively reduced — “tapered” — once income exceeds certain thresholds. This can significantly limit how much someone can contribute to a pension with tax relief.

The taper only applies if both your threshold income (broadly, total income before pension contributions) exceeds £200,000 AND your adjusted income (total income plus employer pension contributions) exceeds £260,000. If your threshold income is below £200,000, the taper does not apply regardless of your adjusted income.

Where the taper does apply, the Annual Allowance reduces by £1 for every £2 that adjusted income exceeds £260,000. The floor is £10,000 — your allowance cannot fall below this, regardless of how high your income is.

Taper Calculation

Threshold Amount Effect
Threshold Income Above £200,000 Triggers taper check
Adjusted Income Above £260,000 Taper begins
Taper rate £1 lost per £2 over £260,000 Reduces allowance
Minimum allowance £10,000 Floor applies above £360,000 adjusted income

Adjusted Income vs Threshold Income

The distinction between these two measures is important because employer contributions count towards adjusted income but not threshold income.

Income Type Threshold Income Adjusted Income
Salary
Bonus
Dividends
Employer pension contributions ✗ — not included ✓ — included
Employee pension contributions ✗ — deducted ✓ — added back

Taper Example

Adjusted Income Annual Allowance
£260,000 £60,000 (full)
£280,000 £50,000
£300,000 £40,000
£320,000 £30,000
£340,000 £20,000
£360,000 and above £10,000 (minimum)

If the tapered allowance applies to you, careful planning with your employer about salary, bonuses, and the structure of pension contributions can sometimes preserve more of your allowance.

Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA) — £10,000

When you flexibly access your defined contribution pension — not just taking a tax-free lump sum, but actually drawing taxable income — a permanently reduced allowance called the Money Purchase Annual Allowance kicks in. This drops your ability to make tax-relieved contributions to defined contribution pensions from £60,000 to just £10,000.

The MPAA exists to prevent pension “recycling” — where someone takes money out of their pension and immediately puts it back in to get tax relief a second time. It is a significant and often irreversible consequence, which means the decision to access pension flexibly should not be taken lightly, especially by anyone still working and wanting to save more.

What Triggers the MPAA?

Not all pension actions trigger the MPAA. Simply taking the 25% tax-free cash does not trigger it — the key is whether you take any taxable income.

Action Triggers MPAA?
Taking 25% tax-free lump sum only (no income) No — MPAA not triggered
Taking income via drawdown Yes
Taking an Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum (UFPLS) Yes
Buying an annuity No
Taking small pot lump sums (pots under £10,000) No
Reaching pension age but not accessing funds No

MPAA Impact

If you trigger the MPAA while still working and planning to contribute significantly to your pension, the impact can be serious. It is worth carefully considering the timing of any flexible access against your future saving plans.

Before MPAA After MPAA
£60,000 annual allowance for DC pensions £10,000 annual allowance for DC pensions
Carry forward available for all pension types Carry forward only available on DB pension allowance
Full tax relief available Tax relief capped at £10,000 for DC contributions

How to Avoid Triggering MPAA

Strategy How It Works
Take tax-free lump sum only Do not take any taxable pension income yet
Buy an annuity Annuity purchase does not trigger MPAA
Use a defined benefit pension first DB income does not trigger MPAA
Use the small pot rule Pots under £10,000 can be taken without triggering MPAA

Tax-Free Lump Sum — Lump Sum Allowance

When you access your pension, you can normally take up to 25% as a tax-free lump sum. However, there is a lifetime cap — the Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) of £268,275 — on how much you can take tax-free across all your pensions combined during your lifetime.

The LSA replaced the old Lifetime Allowance for this specific purpose after April 2024. For most people with pension pots below around £1,070,000, the LSA will not be a restriction — 25% of £1,070,000 is £267,500, just below the limit. Only those with substantially larger pots need to actively plan around the LSA.

How the LSA Works

Detail Amount
Maximum tax-free lump sum 25% of pot, subject to £268,275 lifetime limit
Applies across all pensions Combined total across your lifetime
Exceeding the limit Excess above £268,275 taxed at your marginal income tax rate

Tax-Free Lump Sum Examples

Pension Pot 25% of Pot Tax-Free Amount Taxable Excess
£200,000 £50,000 £50,000 £0
£500,000 £125,000 £125,000 £0
£1,000,000 £250,000 £250,000 £0
£1,500,000 £375,000 £268,275 £106,725 taxed at marginal rate
£2,000,000 £500,000 £268,275 £231,725 taxed at marginal rate

Protected Allowances

People who took out Lifetime Allowance protection before April 2024 — when the Lifetime Allowance was in place — may be entitled to a higher Lump Sum Allowance. If you have any protection certificate, you should check your personal LSA position carefully.

Protection Type LSA Amount
No protection £268,275
Fixed Protection 2016 £312,500
Individual Protection 2016 Varies (up to £312,500)
Enhanced Protection Depends on previous LTA level

Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance — £1,073,100

The Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA) is a broader cap that covers the combined total of tax-free lump sums you take during your lifetime plus any lump sum death benefits paid out when you die. It is set at £1,073,100 — the same figure as the old Lifetime Allowance.

In practice the LSDBA mainly matters for pension death benefits. If you die before age 75, your pension funds can typically be passed to your beneficiaries as a lump sum free of income tax (though Inheritance Tax may apply in some cases from 2027). The LSDBA caps the total amount that can be paid this way.

LSDBA Rules

Scenario Treatment
Death before 75 Lump sum to beneficiaries tax-free up to LSDBA
Death after 75 Lump sum taxed at beneficiary’s marginal income tax rate
Serious ill-health lump sum Tax-free up to LSDBA if under 75
Exceeding LSDBA Excess taxed at beneficiary’s marginal rate

Pension Tax Relief Rates

Pension contributions attract tax relief at your marginal income tax rate — meaning the government is effectively topping up every pound you contribute. For a basic rate taxpayer, every £80 you contribute becomes £100 in your pension. For a higher rate taxpayer, every £60 becomes £100.

In England, Wales and Northern Ireland:

Tax Band Tax Relief Rate What £1,000 gross pension contribution actually costs you
Basic rate (20%) 20% £800
Higher rate (40%) 40% £600
Additional rate (45%) 45% £550

Scottish taxpayers have different income tax rates, which affects how relief is claimed. Relief is automatically added at the basic rate for most pension schemes. Higher and additional rate taxpayers need to claim the extra relief through Self Assessment.

Scotland

Tax Band Tax Relief Rate Net Cost of £1,000 Gross
Starter/Basic (19–20%) 20% at source £800
Intermediate (21%) Claim extra 1% via Self Assessment ~£790
Higher (42%) Claim extra 22% via Self Assessment ~£580
Advanced (45%) Claim extra 25% via Self Assessment ~£550
Top (48%) Claim extra 28% via Self Assessment ~£520

How to Claim Higher/Additional Rate Relief

Basic rate tax relief is added automatically by most pension schemes — either the scheme claims it from HMRC (relief at source) or your employer deducts contributions before PAYE is applied (net pay). Higher and additional rate taxpayers must claim their extra relief separately.

Method How
Self Assessment Declare contributions on your tax return — HMRC extends your basic rate band
Phone HMRC Request a tax code adjustment for ongoing relief
Net pay scheme Employer deducts before tax — full relief automatic

Defined Benefit Pension Rules

Defined benefit (DB) pensions — also called final salary or career average schemes — accrue pension entitlement differently from defined contribution pensions. Rather than a pot of money growing in value, you build up a guaranteed income entitlement based on salary and service. HMRC uses a formula to convert this annual entitlement into a pension “input amount” for Annual Allowance purposes.

The formula multiplies the increase in your annual entitlement during the year by a factor of 16. This is intended to approximate the capital cost of that income, on the assumption that £1 of annual pension is roughly equivalent to £16 of capital (a 16:1 ratio).

DB Allowance Calculation

Step Calculation
1 Take your annual pension entitlement at the end of the scheme year
2 Subtract entitlement at the start (uprated by CPI)
3 Multiply by 16
4 Add any lump sum increase
5 Result = pension input amount — counts towards £60,000 Annual Allowance

DB Example

Item Amount
Pension at year start £25,000/year
After CPI uplift (3%) £25,750/year
Pension at year end £27,500/year
Increase £1,750/year
× 16 multiplier £28,000 pension input amount

This £28,000 counts towards the £60,000 Annual Allowance. In this example the person has £32,000 of remaining allowance for the year (£60,000 minus £28,000).

Annual Allowance Charge

If your total pension contributions in a tax year exceed the Annual Allowance (after carry forward), you must pay a tax charge on the excess. The charge is calculated at your marginal income tax rate — so for a higher rate taxpayer, every pound above the allowance triggers a 40% charge. This largely cancels out the tax relief benefit of the excess contribution.

How the Charge Works

Item Detail
Charge rate Your marginal income tax rate
What is charged The amount by which contributions exceed your allowance
Payment Via Self Assessment tax return
Scheme Pays Option to ask your pension to pay if the charge exceeds £2,000

Annual Allowance Charge Example

Scenario Calculation
Total contributions £75,000
Annual allowance (including carry forward) £60,000
Excess £15,000
Tax band 40%
Annual Allowance charge £6,000

Scheme Pays

If your Annual Allowance charge exceeds £2,000 and the excess was caused by mandatory contributions (not voluntary carry forward), you can elect for your pension scheme to pay the charge on your behalf. The scheme reduces your pension entitlement accordingly. This can be useful if you do not have the cash to pay the charge directly but does permanently reduce your pension.

Key Pension Dates 2026/27

Date Event
6 April 2026 New tax year — annual allowance refreshes
31 January 2027 Self Assessment deadline for 2025/26 (claim higher rate pension relief)
5 April 2027 End of 2026/27 tax year — last chance to use 2026/27 allowance

Annual Allowance — £60,000

The Annual Allowance caps how much can be contributed to your pensions each year with tax relief.

What Counts Towards the Annual Allowance?

Contribution Type Counts?
Your personal contributions Yes
Employer contributions Yes
Salary sacrifice contributions Yes
Defined benefit pension accrual Yes (calculated differently)
State Pension No

Annual Allowance Rules

Rule Detail
Maximum £60,000 (or 100% of earnings if lower)
Minimum for non-earners £3,600 gross (£2,880 net)
Employer contributions Unlimited, but still count towards your allowance
Tax charge on excess Marginal income tax rate

Example: £80,000 Salary

Contribution Maximum Tax-Relieved
Personal contributions £60,000 gross
Combined with employer £60,000 total
Tax relief at 40% £24,000

Carry Forward — Use Unused Allowance

If you haven’t used your full £60,000 allowance in previous years, you can carry forward the unused amount.

Carry Forward Rules

Rule Detail
Years available Previous 3 tax years
Requirement Must have been in a pension scheme each year
Order of use Current year’s allowance used first
Maximum with carry forward Up to £60,000 per year × 4 = £240,000

Carry Forward Example

Tax Year Allowance Used Unused
2023/24 £60,000 £10,000 £50,000
2024/25 £60,000 £8,000 £52,000
2025/26 £60,000 £12,000 £48,000
2026/27 £60,000 £60,000
Total available 2026/27 £210,000

Who Should Use Carry Forward?

Situation Benefit
Large bonus this year Shelter from income tax
Earning over £100,000 Restore Personal Allowance
Inheritance received Tax-efficient investment
Business sale Shelter the proceeds
Approaching retirement Maximise pension pot

Tapered Annual Allowance — High Earners

If you earn over £260,000 (threshold income + adjusted income combined), your Annual Allowance is reduced.

Taper Calculation

Threshold Amount Effect
Threshold Income £200,000+ Triggers taper check
Adjusted Income £260,000+ Taper applies
Taper rate £1 lost per £2 over £260,000
Minimum allowance £10,000 Floor kicks in at £360,000

Adjusted Income vs Threshold Income

Income Type Threshold Income Adjusted Income
Salary
Bonus
Dividends
Employer pension contributions
Employee pension contributions ✗ (deduct)

Taper Example

Total Income Annual Allowance
£260,000 £60,000
£280,000 £50,000
£300,000 £40,000
£320,000 £30,000
£340,000 £20,000
£360,000+ £10,000

Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA) — £10,000

Once you’ve flexibly accessed your pension, your Annual Allowance drops for defined contribution pensions.

What Triggers the MPAA?

Action Triggers MPAA?
Taking 25% tax-free lump sum only (no income) No
Taking income via drawdown Yes
Taking an UFPLS (Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum) Yes
Buying an annuity No
Taking small pot lump sums (under £10,000) No
Reaching pension age but not accessing No

MPAA Impact

Before MPAA After MPAA
£60,000 annual allowance (DC) £10,000 annual allowance (DC)
Carry forward available Carry forward still available for DB
Full tax relief Tax relief on £10,000 only

How to Avoid Triggering MPAA

Strategy How It Works
Take tax-free lump sum only Don’t take any taxable income yet
Buy an annuity Annuity purchase doesn’t trigger MPAA
Use defined benefit pension first DB pensions don’t trigger MPAA
Small pot rule Pots under £10,000 can be taken without triggering

Tax-Free Lump Sum — Lump Sum Allowance

You can take up to 25% of your pension tax-free, subject to the Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) of £268,275.

How the LSA Works

Detail Amount
Maximum tax-free lump sum 25% of pot, up to £268,275 lifetime
Multiple pensions Combined across all pensions
Exceeding the limit Excess taxed at marginal rate

Tax-Free Lump Sum Examples

Pension Pot 25% of Pot Tax-Free Amount Taxable Excess
£200,000 £50,000 £50,000 £0
£500,000 £125,000 £125,000 £0
£1,000,000 £250,000 £250,000 £0
£1,500,000 £375,000 £268,275 £106,725
£2,000,000 £500,000 £268,275 £231,725

Protected Allowances

If you had Lifetime Allowance protection before April 2024, you may have a higher Lump Sum Allowance:

Protection LSA Amount
No protection £268,275
Fixed Protection 2016 £312,500
Individual Protection 2016 Varies (up to £312,500)
Enhanced Protection Depends on previous LTA

Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance — £1,073,100

This limits the combined value of:

  • Tax-free lump sums you take
  • Serious ill-health lump sums
  • Death benefit lump sums paid to beneficiaries

LSDBA Rules

Scenario Treatment
Death before 75 Lump sum to beneficiaries tax-free (up to LSDBA)
Death after 75 Lump sum taxed at beneficiary’s marginal rate
Serious ill-health Tax-free up to LSDBA if under 75
Exceeding LSDBA Excess taxed at 55% (lump sum) or marginal rate

Pension Tax Relief Rates

Tax relief on pension contributions depends on your marginal tax rate.

England/Wales/NI

Tax Band Tax Relief Rate £1,000 Gross Costs
Basic rate (20%) 20% £800 net
Higher rate (40%) 40% £600 net
Additional rate (45%) 45% £550 net

Scotland

Tax Band Tax Relief Rate £1,000 Gross Costs
Starter/Basic (19-20%) 20% (reliefs at UK rate) £800 net
Intermediate (21%) 21% £790 net
Higher (42%) 42% £580 net
Advanced (45%) 45% £550 net
Top (48%) 48% £520 net

How to Claim Higher/Additional Rate Relief

Method How
Self Assessment Claim on tax return
Phone HMRC Request tax code adjustment
Net pay scheme (employer) Automatic at full rate

Defined Benefit Pension Rules

Defined benefit (final salary/career average) pensions calculate allowance use differently.

DB Allowance Calculation

Step Calculation
1 Take your annual pension entitlement at year end
2 Subtract entitlement at year start (uprated by CPI)
3 Multiply by 16
4 Add any lump sum increase
5 Result = pension input amount

DB Example

Item Amount
Pension at year start £25,000/year
After CPI uplift £25,750/year
Pension at year end £27,500/year
Increase £1,750/year
× 16 £28,000 pension input

This counts towards your £60,000 annual allowance.

Annual Allowance Charge

If you exceed your annual allowance, you pay a tax charge on the excess.

How the Charge Works

Item Rate
Charge rate Your marginal income tax rate
On excess contributions Income tax as if extra income
Scheme Pays Ask pension to pay charge if over £2,000

Annual Allowance Charge Example

Scenario Calculation
Contributions £75,000
Annual allowance £60,000
Excess £15,000
Tax band 40%
Charge £6,000

Scheme Pays

If your charge is over £2,000 and contributions (not carry forward) caused it, you can ask your pension scheme to pay the charge. They reduce your pension to cover it.

Key Pension Dates 2026/27

Date Event
6 April 2026 New tax year — annual allowance refreshes
31 January 2027 Self Assessment deadline for 2025/26 (claim higher rate relief)
5 April 2027 End of 2026/27 tax year
31 July 2027 Deadline for election re: carry forward (previous year)

Sources

  1. HMRC — Pension annual allowance
  2. HMRC — Tax on your pension
  3. HMRC — Tax relief on pension contributions
  4. HMRC — Tax-free lump sum