Savings & Investing

Retirement Income Guide UK — How to Fund Your Life After Work

Plan your retirement income from all sources — state pension, workplace pensions, SIPPs, ISAs, and more. Drawdown strategies, tax planning, and making your money last.

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.

Retirement income planning is where all your years of saving finally pay off — or don’t. The decisions you make about how to draw from your pension, when to take your state pension, and how to combine different income sources can mean thousands of pounds more (or less) over your retirement.

Many people reach retirement with multiple pension pots, ISAs, and savings accounts but no clear strategy for turning that wealth into sustainable income. They take too much too soon, pay unnecessary tax, or run out of money in their 80s when they need it most.

The good news is that with proper planning, you can create a reliable retirement income that lasts as long as you do. The state pension provides a guaranteed foundation. Your workplace and personal pensions offer flexibility through drawdown or security through annuities. ISA withdrawals are completely tax-free, making them perfect for minimising your overall tax bill.

This guide shows you exactly how to combine these sources to fund a comfortable retirement, minimise tax, and ensure your money lasts.

Your Retirement Income Sources

1. State Pension

Feature Amount (2025/26)
Full new state pension £11,502/year (£221.20/week)
Years of NI contributions needed 35 years for full amount
Minimum qualifying years 10 years
State pension age 67 (rising to 68 between 2044-2046)

Check your forecast at gov.uk/check-state-pension.

2. Workplace and Personal Pensions

Your defined contribution pension pot can provide income through:

  • Drawdown — keep your pot invested and withdraw as needed
  • Annuity — convert your pot into guaranteed income for life
  • UFPLS — take lump sums (25% tax-free per withdrawal)
  • Combination — mix drawdown and annuity

3. ISA Savings and Investments

ISA withdrawals are completely tax-free — making ISAs a valuable complement to taxable pension income:

ISA Type Use in Retirement
Cash ISA Emergency fund, short-term needs
Stocks and Shares ISA Growth and income
LISA Accessible from age 60

4. Other Sources

  • Rental income from property
  • Part-time work or freelancing
  • Defined benefit pensions (if applicable)
  • Savings and investments outside tax wrappers
  • Equity release from your home (as a last resort)

How Much Do You Need?

PLSA Retirement Living Standards

Standard Single Couple Covers
Minimum £14,400 £22,400 Basic needs, limited extras
Moderate £31,300 £43,100 Comfortable, holidays in Europe, dining out
Comfortable £43,100 £59,000 Generous lifestyle, long-haul holidays, new car

Pension Pot Needed (Beyond State Pension)

After deducting the full state pension (~£11,500/year):

Target Income Extra Needed Pot Required (4% rule)
£20,000 £8,500 £212,500
£25,000 £13,500 £337,500
£30,000 £18,500 £462,500
£40,000 £28,500 £712,500
£50,000 £38,500 £962,500

Drawdown Strategies

The 4% Rule

Withdraw 4% of your initial portfolio per year, adjusted for inflation. Historically, this has sustained portfolios for 30+ years.

Example: £400,000 pension pot

  • Year 1 withdrawal: £16,000
  • Adjusts with inflation each subsequent year
  • Combined with state pension: £27,500/year

The Bucket Strategy

Divide your retirement savings into three “buckets”:

Bucket Timeframe What It Holds Purpose
1. Cash 0–2 years Cash, savings accounts Immediate income needs
2. Bonds 3–5 years Bonds, gilts Medium-term stability
3. Growth 6+ years Equities, index funds Long-term growth

You draw from Bucket 1 for daily expenses, replenishing it from Bucket 2, and replenishing Bucket 2 from Bucket 3 during good market conditions.

Natural Yield

Only withdraw the dividends and interest your investments produce — never touching the capital. This preserves your pot for inheritance but may provide a lower income (typically 2–4% per year).

Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Planning

Order of Withdrawals

Drawing from different sources in the right order minimises tax:

  1. Tax-free pension lump sum (25%) — no tax, no impact on tax bands
  2. ISA withdrawals — tax-free, do not affect your tax bill
  3. Pension drawdown up to the personal allowance — tax-free income
  4. Pension drawdown into basic rate — at 20%
  5. Taxable investments — use CGT annual exempt amount first

Example: Tax-Efficient £30,000 Income

Source Amount Tax
State pension £11,500 Uses part of personal allowance
Pension drawdown £1,070 Uses remaining personal allowance
ISA withdrawal £10,000 Tax-free
Pension drawdown (basic rate) £7,430 20% = £1,486 tax
Total income £30,000 £1,486 total tax

Effective tax rate: 5% — much lower than working-life tax rates.

Avoiding the 40% Tax Trap

Keep total taxable income below £50,270 to avoid higher rate tax. If you need more, draw the excess from ISAs (tax-free).

Making Your Money Last

The Risks

Risk Impact Mitigation
Living longer than expected Pot runs out Part-annuity for guaranteed income floor
Market crash early in retirement Sequence of returns risk Cash buffer (Bucket 1), reduce withdrawals
Inflation Purchasing power erodes Maintain equity allocation for growth
Overspending Pot depleted prematurely Set a sustainable withdrawal rate and review annually

Annual Review Checklist

Every year, review:

  1. Portfolio value — are you on track?
  2. Withdrawal rate — adjust if returns have been poor
  3. Asset allocation — rebalance between buckets
  4. Tax efficiency — are you using all allowances?
  5. State pension forecast — is it unchanged?
  6. Insurance needs — health cover, long-term care planning

Getting Started

  1. Check your state pension forecast — gov.uk
  2. Review all pension pots — use pension transfers to consolidate
  3. Calculate your target income — using the PLSA standards as a guide
  4. Calculate your gap — total needed minus state pension = what your pots must provide
  5. Choose your drawdown strategy — 4% rule, buckets, or hybrid
  6. Get your tax planning right — draw from the right sources in the right order
  7. Consider professional advice — particularly for larger pots or complex situations

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Sources

  1. FCA — Investing
  2. MoneyHelper — Investing