Savings and investment information is for educational purposes only. The value of investments can go down as well as up. Cash savings up to £85,000 per person per institution are protected by the FSCS.
How much do you need to retire comfortably? Use this guide to calculate your retirement target and track your progress.
Retirement Income Standards (2024/25)
The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association defines three retirement living standards:
Single Person
Standard
Annual Income
Monthly
Minimum
£14,400
£1,200
Moderate
£31,300
£2,608
Comfortable
£43,100
£3,592
Couple
Standard
Annual Income
Monthly
Minimum
£22,400
£1,867
Moderate
£43,100
£3,592
Comfortable
£59,000
£4,917
Assumes you own your home outright (no mortgage or rent).
What Each Standard Covers
Category
Minimum
Moderate
Comfortable
Housing
Basic maintenance
Some improvements
Regular upgrades
Food
Basic, home-cooked
Occasional eating out
Regular dining out
Transport
Public transport
Older car
Newer car (replace every 5yr)
Holidays
UK breaks
Europe annually
Long-haul + Europe
Leisure
Free activities
Some paid hobbies
Regular activities
How Much Pension Pot Do You Need?
Using the 4% rule (withdraw 4% annually for 25+ years):
Single Person
Retirement Standard
Annual Need
Pension Pot Required
Minimum
£14,400
£90,000*
Moderate
£31,300
£495,000*
Comfortable
£43,100
£790,000*
Couple
Retirement Standard
Annual Need
Pension Pot Required
Minimum
£22,400
£185,000*
Moderate
£43,100
£535,000*
Comfortable
£59,000
£870,000*
Assumes full state pension of ~£11,500/year per person is received.
State Pension
Status
Weekly Amount (2024/25)
Annual
Full new state pension
£221.20
£11,502
Basic state pension
£169.50
£8,814
You need 35 qualifying years for full state pension. Check your forecast at gov.uk.
Pension Pot Calculator by Age
Target: Moderate Retirement (Single)
Current Age
Target Pot at Retirement (67)
Monthly Contribution Needed*
25
£495,000
£350
30
£495,000
£450
35
£495,000
£600
40
£495,000
£850
45
£495,000
£1,200
50
£495,000
£1,850
Assumes 5% annual growth, includes employer contribution.
How Much Should You Have Saved by Age?
Rule of Thumb: Multiples of Salary
Age
Target Pension Savings
30
1x annual salary
40
3x annual salary
50
6x annual salary
60
8x annual salary
67
10x annual salary
Example: £40,000 Salary
Age
Target Savings
30
£40,000
40
£120,000
50
£240,000
60
£320,000
67
£400,000
Retirement Income Sources
Source
Typical Amount
Notes
State pension
£11,500/year
From age 66-67
Workplace pension
Varies
Depends on contributions
Private pension (SIPP)
Varies
Personal contributions
ISA savings
Varies
Tax-free withdrawals
Other savings
Varies
Subject to tax on interest
Property
Varies
Downsizing, equity release
Part-time work
Varies
Semi-retirement option
Early Retirement Considerations
Retiring at 55 vs 67
Factor
Retire at 55
Retire at 67
Years in retirement
30-35+
18-23
Pension pot needed
Much higher
Standard
State pension gap
11-12 years
None
Additional savings need
Significant
Standard
Retiring at 55 with No State Pension
Retirement Standard
Annual Need (no state pension)
Pot Required (4% rule)
Minimum (single)
£14,400
£360,000
Moderate (single)
£31,300
£782,500
Comfortable (single)
£43,100
£1,077,500
Withdrawal Strategies
Strategy
Description
Risk Level
4% rule
Withdraw 4% annually
Moderate
Bucket strategy
Split into short/medium/long-term
Moderate
Annuity
Guaranteed income for life
Low
Drawdown
Flexible withdrawals
Higher
Hybrid
Part annuity, part drawdown
Moderate
Tax in Retirement
Income Source
Tax Treatment
State pension
Taxable (uses personal allowance)
Pension drawdown
Taxable as income
ISA withdrawals
Tax-free
Savings interest
£1,000 tax-free (basic rate), £500 (higher rate)
Dividends
£500 tax-free, then taxed
Inflation Impact
Current Amount
After 20 Years (2.5% inflation)
After 30 Years
£30,000
£18,200 purchasing power
£14,000
£40,000
£24,300 purchasing power
£18,700
£50,000
£30,400 purchasing power
£23,400
Your pension needs to grow to maintain purchasing power.
Action Checklist
Now
Check state pension forecast on gov.uk
Review current pension contributions
Check all old workplace pensions
Consider consolidating pensions
Annually
Review pension statements
Increase contributions if possible
Check investments are appropriate for age
Update retirement target
10 Years Before Retirement
Get serious about retirement date
Model different scenarios
Consider reducing investment risk
Plan for tax-efficient withdrawals
Key Takeaways
Know your target — minimum, moderate, or comfortable?
State pension helps — but won’t be enough alone for most people
Start early — compound growth is powerful
Check regularly — are you on track?
Plan for longevity — could live 30+ years in retirement