Want to see your exact amount? Use the State Pension Calculator to find your pension by qualifying year count, deferral value, and whether buying missing NI years is worth it.
The New State Pension is the foundation of UK retirement income—but what you receive depends entirely on your National Insurance (NI) record. Understanding the rules now, while you still have time to fill gaps or defer, could add thousands of pounds to your lifetime pension income.
New State Pension at a Glance (2025/26)
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Full New State Pension | £221.20 per week (£11,502/year) |
| Triple Lock increase (April 2025) | 4.1% (highest of earnings, inflation, 2.5%) |
| Qualifying years needed for full pension | 35 |
| Minimum qualifying years to receive any pension | 10 |
| State Pension Age | 66 (rising to 67 between 2026–2028) |
| Deferral rate | 1% for every 9 weeks deferred (~5.8% per year) |
Who Gets the New State Pension
The New State Pension applies to:
- Men born on or after 6 April 1951
- Women born on or after 6 April 1953
Those born before these dates receive the Basic State Pension and Additional State Pension (SERPS/S2P) under the old rules—different amounts and calculations apply.
How Qualifying Years Work
Each qualifying year requires NI contributions or credits at or above a minimum threshold. You can accumulate qualifying years through:
| Route | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Employment | Employer deducts NI from wages; qualifies if earnings above Lower Earnings Limit (~£6,396) |
| Self-employment | Pay Class 2 NI (£3.45/week) or Class 4 on profits above threshold |
| NI Credits | Automatic for Child Benefit claimants, carers, JSA/ESA claimants, and others |
| Voluntary contributions | Pay Class 3 NI (£17.45/week) to fill gaps |
Gaps in your record: If you were employed but earning below the Lower Earnings Limit, contracted out into a defined benefit pension pre-2016, or spent years abroad, you may have gaps.
Checking Your State Pension Forecast
Use the Check Your State Pension forecast tool at gov.uk (requires Government Gateway login). It shows:
- Your current qualifying year count
- Projected full pension based on current trajectory
- Any gaps you can fill and the cost to do so
Deadline to fill old gaps: Under the transitional arrangements that ended April 2023, gaps back to 2006/07 could be filled at the voluntary rate. Now, gaps older than 6 years generally cannot be filled. Act promptly when gaps are identified.
Gap-Filling: Is It Worth It?
| Scenario | Cost to Fill One Year (Class 3) | Annual Pension Gain | Breakeven |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 gap at £907 | £907 | £221.20 ÷ 35 = £6.32/week = £328.86/year | ~2.8 years |
| Already have 35 years | N/A | No benefit—already at maximum | — |
| Under 35 years with gaps | £907 per year | £328.86/year additional | ~2.8 years |
If you live more than 3 years past State Pension Age, filling gaps is almost always financially worthwhile. Consider your health, family history, and deferral plans before deciding.
Decision Framework: Maximising Your State Pension
| Situation | Action |
|---|---|
| Under 35 qualifying years and still working | Continue working/contributing—years accumulate automatically |
| Under 35 years with employment gaps | Check gov.uk forecast; fill gaps at Class 3 rate |
| Taking career break (child care) | Claim Child Benefit even if income is high—NI credits attach to the claim |
| Self-employed, profits below Class 4 threshold | Ensure Class 2 contributions are paid—cheap and effective |
| Considering early retirement | Check if 35 qualifying years are met; if not, consider voluntary contributions |
| Considering deferral | See table below—can be valuable for higher-rate taxpayers |
Deferral: When to Delay Taking Your Pension
Every 9 weeks you defer, your pension increases by 1%—equivalent to approximately 5.8% per year. You can take the higher weekly amount, but you cannot take a lump sum under the New State Pension rules (that option only existed under the old rules).
| Deferral Period | Extra Weekly Amount | Breakeven vs. Non-Deferral |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | +£12.83/week (+5.8%) | ~17 years post-deferral |
| 2 years | +£25.66/week (+11.6%) | ~17 years post-deferral |
| 5 years | +£64.14/week (+29%) | ~17 years post-deferral |
Deferral is most valuable if:
- You are still earning and don’t need the pension income immediately
- Your State Pension would push you into a higher tax band if taken immediately
- You have good health and family longevity on your side
State Pension and Tax
The State Pension is taxable income, but it is paid gross—no tax is deducted at source. HMRC typically collects tax by adjusting your PAYE code (if you have other income) or through Self Assessment (if self-employed or if pension income plus other income exceeds your Personal Allowance).
For the 2025/26 tax year, the full New State Pension of £11,502 is below the Personal Allowance of £12,570—so if it’s your only income, no tax is due. But add a workplace pension on top and some of that combined income will become taxable.
Contracting Out: Why Your Forecast Might Be Lower Than Expected
Before April 2016, some workers “contracted out” of SERPS/S2P through their employer’s defined benefit pension—receiving a slightly higher occupational pension in exchange for reduced NI contributions. When the New State Pension launched in 2016, a “starting amount” was calculated reflecting this, and many people found their starting amount was below the full rate.
If your forecast shows less than the full New State Pension and you believe you had contracting out in your history, this is likely the reason. Additional qualifying years can increase your amount, but only up to the full rate—contracting out deductions cannot be fully reversed.
Pension Credit: Top-Up for Low-Income Retirees
If your income in retirement is below the minimum guarantee level, Pension Credit can top it up. Pension Credit has two parts:
| Component | Detail (2025/26) |
|---|---|
| Guarantee Credit | Tops up weekly income to £218.15 (single) or £332.95 (couple) |
| Savings Credit | Extra payment for those who saved modestly toward retirement (only available if reached SPA before 6 April 2016) |
Pension Credit also unlocks passported benefits: free TV licence (if over 75), Council Tax Reduction, Housing Benefit, and NHS dental treatment. The estimated take-up rate is around 60%, meaning hundreds of thousands of eligible retirees miss out each year. Applying is free via gov.uk or by phone.
National Insurance Contributions and State Pension: Year-by-Year View
How your NI record builds over a typical career:
| Career Stage | NI Source | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employed | Class 1 (employee + employer) | Automatic through payroll |
| Self-employed, profits > £12,570 | Class 4 | Does not count toward State Pension |
| Self-employed, profits £6,725–£12,570 | Class 2 treated as paid | Counts toward State Pension |
| Self-employed, profits under £6,725 | Voluntary Class 2 (£3.45/week) | Recommended to protect entitlement cheaply |
| Caring for children under 12 | NI Credits via Child Benefit | Must claim Child Benefit even if income is above threshold |
| Carer for someone 20+ hours/week | Carer’s Credit | Protects year without NI cost |
| Unemployed, claiming JSA/ESA | NI Credits | Automatic |
| Studying / gap year | No NI credits | Consider voluntary Class 3 if within 6-year window |
Workplace Pensions vs. State Pension
The State Pension provides a guaranteed inflation-linked base, but for most people it will not be sufficient on its own:
| Income Source | Approximate Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Full New State Pension | £11,502/year | Triple Lock protected |
| Typical workplace pension (auto-enrolled) | Varies widely | Depends on contributions and investment returns |
| Private savings / ISA | Varies | Flexible but not inflation-linked |
The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association suggests a “moderate” retirement lifestyle in the UK currently costs around £31,300/year for a single person. The State Pension covers roughly 37% of that. The rest must come from workplace savings, personal pensions, ISAs, or property income.
Auto-enrolment into workplace pensions (minimum 8% of qualifying earnings total) has significantly increased private pension savings since 2012, but contribution rates remain low for many workers—particularly part-time and lower-wage employees.
Frequently Asked Questions
When can I claim the State Pension? State Pension Age is currently 66 for both men and women. It will rise to 67 between 2026 and 2028 (if you were born between 6 April 1960 and 5 April 1977), and further increases are under review. Check your personal SPA at gov.uk/state-pension-age.
Can I get the State Pension if I live abroad? Yes, if you have sufficient qualifying years. However, pension increases (Triple Lock) do not apply unless you live in a country with a reciprocal social security agreement with the UK (e.g., EU countries, USA, Canada, Australia).
What happens to the State Pension if I die before claiming? Under the New State Pension, there is no inheritance of State Pension entitlement for spouses in most cases. Some survivors may be entitled to an additional protected payment if their partner had accrued entitlement under the old system. This is different from workplace pensions, which typically continue to named dependants.
Does maternity or paternity leave affect my NI record? No—while on statutory maternity, paternity, or adoption pay (at or above the Lower Earnings Limit), NI contributions continue as normal. Periods of unpaid leave may require a NI credit or voluntary contribution to protect the year.
Can I claim State Pension and continue working? Yes. You can claim your State Pension and continue working in any paid capacity. Your earnings will be subject to Income Tax and NI as normal. State Pension age is not a compulsory retirement point.
What if I have less than 10 qualifying years? You will receive no State Pension. You may still be able to fill gaps back up to 6 years to reach the 10-year minimum. Beyond that, welfare benefits such as Pension Credit may provide a safety net in retirement.
How does the Triple Lock work? The Triple Lock guarantees the State Pension rises each April by the highest of: average earnings growth (July–September prior year), CPI inflation (September prior year), or 2.5%. For 2025/26, this meant a 4.1% increase based on earnings growth.
Core Supporting Guides: UK Retirement and Savings
Build foundational knowledge with these guides:
UK Retirement Planning Resources
Plan your retirement holistically with:
Related: ISA Basics | UK Retirement Planning | Capital Gains Tax
Phase 3 Cross-Market: Retirement Systems
Compare equivalent retirement frameworks across markets:
- US 401(k) Hub
- US IRA and Roth IRA Hub
- UK ISA Basics Hub
- Canada TFSA and RRSP Hub
- Canada CPP/OAS/GIS Hub
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