Pensions - Articles - Early retirees could face a Pre State Pension Gap


PensionBee launches its State Pension Age Calculator, designed to help savers evaluate if they can retire before they’re eligible to receive the State Pension.

 The age people can claim their State Pension has risen significantly since 2010 when the entitlement age was previously 60 for women and 65 for men. Currently 66, the State Pension age is due to increase again to 67 between 2026-2028, with a review to reconsider the rise to 68 scheduled within two years of the next Parliament.

 However, a recent survey by PensionBee revealed that the 'ideal retirement age' for British workers is 60, despite this being some time before they'd be able to receive their State Pension. Meanwhile, the healthy life expectancy (the number of years you can expect to live in good health) for workers in the UK is 63, suggesting a potential pension gap for people who might want or need to retire earlier than their State Pension age.

 This ‘Pre-State Pension Gap’ is defined by PensionBee as the total amount of income someone would need to maintain a minimum, moderate or comfortable lifestyle in retirement before they're eligible to receive their State Pension.

 PensionBee’s new tool enables users to calculate their own State Pension age (based on their date of birth) and the potential ‘Pre-State Pension Gap’ they may face if they plan to retire earlier than this. For example, someone who wishes to retire at 60, assuming their State Pension age is 68 and they're retiring as a couple, would need to have saved enough to generate an income of £136,000 to support them during this eight-year gap, on top of what they need for the rest of their retirement.

 When considering the average life expectancy for women (88) and men (85), a woman retiring at 60 in a couple would need a combined retirement income with her partner of £476,000 for her 28 years of expected retirement, to live a moderate lifestyle.

 Assuming she would receive the full State Pension from 68, £212,000 of this total would come from her State Pension payments and the remaining £264,000 would need to be generated by the couple’s workplace or personal pensions and other savings.

 Becky O’Connor, Director of Public Affairs (VP) at PensionBee, commented: “The dream of retiring early is alive. For many people, it is in fact necessary to give up work before they reach State Pension age, due to caring responsibilities, or illness.

 “As the State Pension age rises, more and more people will find they either want or need to retire before they reach it. So identifying how much extra pension would be required to do so is an important part of retirement planning.”
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Self-employed juggle tax deadlines and pensions
As the Self Assessment deadline approaches, new research from PensionBee reveals that while most self-employed workers are actively engaging with pens
Over 1m retired households are reliant on State Pension
ONS data finds that approximately 740,000 single retirees and 500,000 retired two adult households are “mainly reliant on State Pensions and not econo
£100k+ earners could miss out on £255k in pension tax relief
Reclaiming pension tax relief can add up to £160k or £128k over 20 years for additional and higher rate taxpayers on a £10,000 contribution at 5% grow

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.