TL;DR
Three main strategies convert a UK retirement pot into income: annuity (guaranteed income for life), flexi-access drawdown (flexible withdrawals from invested pot), and a combination of the two. The right choice depends on health, income certainty preference, capacity to bear investment risk, and inheritance objectives.
Key facts
- Annuities provide guaranteed income for life; rates depend on age, health, and prevailing interest rates.
- Flexi-access drawdown keeps the pot invested and allows flexible withdrawals.
- UFPLS (Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum) draws ad-hoc lump sums with 25 percent tax-free.
- 25 percent of a DC pension can typically be taken tax-free, up to the Lump Sum Allowance of GBP 268,275.
- Annuity rates rose substantially in 2022 to 2023 following gilt yield increases, improving the relative attractiveness of annuities.
The three core options
A UK defined contribution pension pot can be converted into retirement income through three core options: annuity purchase, flexi-access drawdown, and UFPLS. Most retirees use a combination.
Annuity
An annuity converts a lump sum into a guaranteed income for life. The rate depends on age (older buyers receive higher rates), health and lifestyle (enhanced annuities for medical conditions), and gilt yields (annuity rates rise with gilts). Single-life annuities pay only to the annuitant; joint-life annuities continue to a spouse; level annuities pay a flat amount; escalating annuities increase each year with inflation or a fixed rate.
Drawdown
Flexi-access drawdown keeps the pension invested. The saver withdraws income or lump sums as needed. 25 percent of the pot can be taken tax-free up to the Lump Sum Allowance; subsequent withdrawals are taxed as income. The pot can grow or fall with investments; the saver bears the risk of running out of money in long retirements.
UFPLS
An Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum draws ad-hoc lump sums, with 25 percent of each withdrawal tax-free and 75 percent taxed as income. UFPLS suits savers wanting specific lump sums without fully entering drawdown.
The combination approach
Many UK retirees combine routes. One common pattern: enough annuity to cover essential expenditure when added to the State Pension, with the remaining pot in drawdown for discretionary spending. This balances income certainty with flexibility.
Sequence risk in drawdown
Drawdown carries sequence risk: poor returns in early retirement combined with withdrawals can permanently impair the pot. Mitigations include a multi-year cash buffer, lower equity weighting, dynamic withdrawal rules (reducing withdrawals after market falls), and partial annuitisation to cover essentials.
Tax considerations
Pension income (after the 25 percent tax-free element) is taxed at the saver's marginal rate. Spreading withdrawals across tax years can keep the saver in the basic-rate band. Combining pension income with ISA withdrawals (which are tax-free) can extend the effective basic-rate band.
Death benefits
Drawdown pots can typically be passed to beneficiaries on the saver's death. Death before 75 generally allows withdrawal free of income tax; death after 75 means withdrawals are taxed at the beneficiary's marginal rate. Most annuities other than joint-life or guarantee-period products end on death with no inheritance.
The MPAA
Once a saver flexibly accesses a DC pension (any withdrawal beyond the 25 percent tax-free element), the Money Purchase Annual Allowance of GBP 10,000 applies to future DC contributions. This is relevant for savers continuing to work and contribute after starting to draw.
The UK pension regulatory framework
UK pensions are regulated under a two-pillar structure. The Pensions Regulator (TPR) supervises occupational and trust-based pensions under the Pensions Act 2004; the Financial Conduct Authority regulates contract-based personal pensions and SIPPs under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. The Pensions Ombudsman handles complaints about pension administration and trustee or provider conduct; the Financial Ombudsman Service handles complaints about FCA-regulated firms more broadly. Both Ombudsman services are free to use and produce binding decisions.
The Pension Protection Fund (PPF) provides compensation where a defined benefit scheme's sponsoring employer becomes insolvent and the scheme cannot meet its obligations. PPF compensation is broadly 100 percent for pensioners at the point of scheme entry and 90 percent for members below scheme retirement age, subject to a compensation cap that has been the subject of successive court challenges. The PPF levy is collected from UK DB schemes and totals several hundred million pounds annually.
The Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) covers contract-based pensions up to GBP 85,000 per provider where the provider fails and client money is missing. The FSCS does not cover market losses on pension investments; only firm failure and missing money or assets are within scope.
Tax framework: contributions, growth, and access
Pension contributions receive tax relief at the saver's marginal rate of income tax. The standard annual allowance for the 2024 to 2025 tax year onwards is GBP 60,000 gross, including employer contributions and the deemed input from defined benefit accrual. High earners face the tapered annual allowance: the allowance reduces by GBP 1 for every GBP 2 of adjusted income above GBP 260,000, to a minimum of GBP 10,000 at adjusted income of GBP 360,000 or above. Threshold income above GBP 200,000 is also required for the taper to apply.
Carry forward allows unused annual allowance from the previous three tax years to be added to the current year's allowance, provided the saver was a member of a registered pension scheme in each of those years. The current year's allowance must be used first; oldest unused allowance is used next. Carry forward is widely used by self-employed earners with variable income and by company directors taking one-off large bonuses.
Tax relief is restricted to the higher of relevant UK earnings or GBP 3,600 gross per tax year for individual contributions. Employer contributions are not subject to the earnings cap. Once a saver flexibly accesses a defined contribution pension (taking any taxable income beyond the 25 percent tax-free element), the Money Purchase Annual Allowance of GBP 10,000 applies to future DC contributions.
The 2024 abolition of the Lifetime Allowance
The Lifetime Allowance was abolished from 6 April 2024 under the Finance Act 2024. Two new allowances replaced it. The Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) of GBP 268,275 caps the total tax-free lump sum a person can take during their lifetime. The Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA) of GBP 1,073,100 caps the total tax-free lump sum and death benefit payable across all pension events.
Existing LTA protections (Enhanced Protection, Fixed Protection 2012/2014/2016, Individual Protection 2014/2016, Primary Protection) translate into proportionally higher LSA and LSDBA figures. A holder of Fixed Protection 2016 has an LSA of GBP 312,500 (25 percent of the protected LTA of GBP 1,250,000). Protection certificates must be retained and shown to the pension provider when taking lump sums.
The Autumn Statement 2024 announced changes from April 2027 to bring most unused pension funds and death benefits within the IHT regime. The detailed legislation is being implemented; specialist pension advice is recommended for savers approaching the lump sum allowances or making significant death benefit planning decisions.
Free guidance and advice routes
The Money and Pensions Service operates two free guidance services under the MoneyHelper brand. MoneyHelper Pensions provides general guidance to anyone with a UK pension; Pension Wise offers a 60 minute appointment for over-50s considering accessing a defined contribution pension, covering access options, tax implications, and practical considerations. Both services are impartial and unconnected to any product provider.
From November 2022 pension scheme providers have been required to actively offer a Pension Wise appointment when a member approaches access age and again when access is requested, under the Stronger Nudge regulations made under section 19 of the Financial Guidance and Claims Act 2018. The provider books the appointment unless the member expressly opts out.
For regulated advice (as distinct from free guidance), FCA-authorised financial advisers can provide personalised pension recommendations. Adviser fees for pension advice typically run from GBP 1,000 for a one-off review to GBP 5,000 or more for complex consolidation, DB transfer, or retirement income planning. FCA rules require regulated advice from a pension transfer specialist for transfers of safeguarded benefits worth GBP 30,000 or more.
Pension scams and anti-scam transfer checks
The Pension Schemes Act 2021 and the Occupational and Personal Pension Schemes (Conditions for Transfers) Regulations 2021 introduced enhanced anti-scam transfer checks from 30 November 2021. Trustees and scheme managers must assess whether amber or red flag indicators of a scam are present before processing a transfer. Red flags allow refusal of the transfer; amber flags require the saver to attend a free MoneyHelper guidance session before the transfer proceeds.
Pensions cold-calling has been banned in the UK since 9 January 2019 under the Privacy and Electronic Communications (Amendment) Regulations 2018. Any unsolicited call, email, or text about a pension is unlawful and should be reported to the Information Commissioner's Office. The FCA's ScamSmart campaign and The Pensions Regulator's pension scam page provide guidance on identifying scams and reporting them to Action Fraud.
Auto-enrolment in detail
Auto-enrolment under the Pensions Act 2008 brought UK workplace pension coverage from around 47 percent in 2012 to over 88 percent by 2023 according to DWP statistics. Eligible workers (age 22 to State Pension age, earning above GBP 10,000 per year, working in the UK) are automatically enrolled into the employer's qualifying workplace pension. The worker can opt out within one month for a refund of contributions; opting out later leaves contributions in the scheme.
The minimum total contribution under auto-enrolment is 8 percent of qualifying earnings, with at least 3 percent from the employer. Qualifying earnings are earnings between GBP 6,240 and GBP 50,270 for 2024 to 2025. Some employers operate on Tier 1, 2, or 3 alternative bases certified under The Pensions Regulator's framework, which can produce different contribution levels on the full salary.
Re-enrolment of opted-out workers must be carried out by the employer every three years. The Pensions Regulator publishes detailed guidance on auto-enrolment compliance and enforcement at thepensionsregulator.gov.uk. Penalties for employer non-compliance range from a fixed GBP 400 notice to escalating daily penalties of GBP 50 to GBP 10,000 depending on employer size.
Pension freedoms and access options
The pension freedoms introduced from 6 April 2015 expanded the access options for defined contribution pensions. Before 2015, most savers were required to buy an annuity by age 75; after the reforms, savers can access their pots flexibly through drawdown, UFPLS, or full encashment. The 25 percent tax-free element remains a feature of the system.
The minimum pension age is currently 55, rising to 57 from 6 April 2028. Savers with protected pension ages (typically from certain occupational schemes such as professional sports careers) can sometimes access earlier. Accessing a pension before the normal minimum age outside the recognised exceptions can trigger unauthorised payment charges of up to 55 percent under HMRC rules.
The Money Purchase Annual Allowance of GBP 10,000 applies once a saver flexibly accesses any taxable income from a DC pension. The MPAA restricts future DC contributions but does not affect defined benefit accrual. Many savers who access a DC pension and continue working find their pension saving capacity limited by the MPAA, particularly where they have substantial earnings.
The Pensions Dashboards Programme
The Pensions Dashboards Programme will allow individuals to see all their UK pensions (occupational, personal, and State Pension) in a single secure online view. The framework is set by the Pensions Dashboards Regulations 2022. The current connection deadline for most pension schemes is 31 October 2026, with larger schemes connecting earlier under a staged plan. Public launch for individuals follows successful scheme connection and a Dashboards Available Point announcement by the Secretary of State.
The dashboards will not allow transactions; they are display only. Users wanting to take action (consolidate, transfer, begin drawdown) will continue to contact the scheme administrator or their adviser. The dashboards are expected to substantially increase awareness of accumulated pension wealth and to encourage consolidation activity once live.
Disclaimer
This article provides general information on UK retirement income strategies and is not personal financial advice. Drawdown and annuity decisions can be irreversible; regulated advice is recommended.
Frequently asked questions
Is an annuity better than drawdown?
It depends on income certainty preference, health, and capacity for investment risk. Many use both.
Can I change my mind after buying an annuity?
Generally no. Annuity purchase is typically irreversible.
What is the 25 percent tax-free element?
25 percent of the DC pot can typically be taken tax-free, up to the Lump Sum Allowance of GBP 268,275.
What happens to drawdown on death?
The remaining pot can typically be passed to beneficiaries. Tax treatment depends on the saver's age at death.
Are annuities good value at current rates?
Rates rose substantially in 2022 to 2023. The decision depends on prevailing gilt yields, the alternative drawdown return, and the saver's preference for certainty.
Frequently asked questions
Is an annuity better than drawdown?
It depends on income certainty preference, health, and capacity for investment risk. Many retirees use both.
Can I change my mind after buying an annuity?
Generally no. Annuity purchase is typically irreversible.
What is the 25 percent tax-free element?
25 percent of the DC pot can typically be taken tax-free, up to the Lump Sum Allowance of GBP 268,275.
What happens to drawdown on death?
The remaining pot can typically be passed to beneficiaries. Tax treatment depends on the saver's age at death.
Are annuities good value at current rates?
Rates rose substantially in 2022 to 2023. The decision depends on prevailing gilt yields and the saver's preference for certainty.