How to draw an income from your pension



Updated on 11 February 2020

Sarah Coles, personal finance analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, runs through all your options if you want to take an income from your pension.

Who will need to draw an income from their pension?

Annuities: pros and cons

Buying an annuity, with at least part of the pot, secures your income for life and could also provide income for your spouse should you die first.

Before you retire, your pension provider may send you an annuity quote, but you don’t need to take an annuity from them.

Check whether your quote includes a guaranteed annuity rate, which will often beat anything else available.

Otherwise, you should shop around and compare quotes.

Before you compare providers, you need to know what you’re looking for as there are several different types of annuity.

Level vs rising

A level annuity will give you a higher payment to begin with but will stay the same for the rest of your life, so it will gradually be eroded by inflation.

The effect of this can be dramatic, and over the course of your retirement may halve the real value of your income.

A rising annuity, meanwhile, will offer a lower starting income but can rise by a fixed percentage or in line with inflation each year.

Spouse’s income

You can arrange for your spouse to receive an income after your death, but this comes at a cost.

Enhanced annuities

These pay higher rates for people who have a shorter-than-average life expectancy due to lifestyle or health issues.

It’s well worth considering as two in three people qualify – due to everything from smoking to high blood pressure and diabetes.  

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How to shop around

Comparison tables like those available on Money Advice Service will give you a guide to the level of income an annuity might provide.

As your annuity choice will have an impact on your income for the rest of your life, shopping around to get the best deal could make a big difference to your retirement.

At the same time, check whether you are entitled to an enhanced rate. This is best done through an annuity broker or financial adviser who can help you with your choices and shop around on your behalf.

Visit the loveMONEY investment centre

Taking a lump sum from your pension

If you plan to take a lump sum from your pension, it’s essential to understand the tax implications. While the first 25% of every withdrawal you make will be tax-free, the rest is treated as income.

This can have a particularly striking impact as this can push you into a higher tax bracket or affect any benefits you are entitled to.

If this approach is right for you, you simply get in touch with your pension provider and tell them you want to withdraw an uncrystallised fund pension lump sum (or UFPLS).

They will take you through a risk assessment process to check you understand the implications of withdrawal, and then send you the money you request.

They’ll take the tax first. When you take a lump sum, the pension provider won’t know whether this is the first of many similar sums to be taken during that tax year, so they may apply an emergency tax code.

This essentially works on the basis that you’re going to take lump sums every month for the rest of the tax year, so instead of getting your entire 25% tax-free allowance, you’ll get a proportion of it (depending on how far through the tax year you are).

It means you’ll need to complete a form and claim the extra tax back.

The other thing to bear in mind is that if you take a payment this way, 75% of each lump sum is considered as income.

As soon as you are taking income from a pension, you trigger something known as the Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA).

This means that if you are working and want to continue contributing to a pension, instead of being able to put £40,000 a year into your pension, you can only put in £4,000.

Using income drawdown in your retirement

This involves taking a tax-free lump sum, of up to 25% of your pension pot, and then moving the rest into a flexi-drawdown product, which invests your money into one or more funds.

You can then take a taxable income at times that suit you from this pot. Many people use this to draw a regular income.

Some people take the full 25% and move the whole pot into drawdown.

Others will only want to take a chunk of their tax-free cash, so will move a corresponding proportion of their pension pot into drawdown – leaving the rest invested within the pension.

The tax on drawdown differs from UFPLS as the first chunk of cash is entirely tax-free, whereas each UFPLS payment will be 25% tax-free and the rest taxed as income.

In addition, because within drawdown you are initially simply taking your tax-free cash, until you start taking a regular income from the pot, you won’t trigger your MPAA, and can still contribute up to £40,000 a year into your pension if you are still working.

Pension savings: how much income do you really need in retirement?

Shop around

It’s worthwhile checking what drawdown products are on offer with other pension providers before committing to your current provider.

Providers differ in the amounts they charge, the investments available, and the services they provide, so it’s essential to find one that matches your needs.

Once you have found a provider, you can get in touch and complete the relevant application form. The company will then contact your pension firm and arrange the transfer of cash.

You will be able to set the level of income you want to take.

The challenge is ensuring that you produce an income for life, which rises each year to offset the rising cost of living, and that you don’t withdraw too much too soon.

Spend too much too soon and your pension income could decrease too quickly over time.

One option is only to withdraw the income generated from the investments in your drawdown plan, so you aren’t spending the capital portion at all.

As a rule of thumb, this is no more than £4,000 for every £100,000 in your drawdown plan.

Whatever level of income you choose, it’s important to revisit it regularly to ensure your investments are performing as expected, and you’re not taking more of your pension pot than you intended.

How much to draw down, where to leave the rest of the money invested and how to minimise the tax you will pay on your income, pensions and investments when you die, is a relatively complex decision, with far-reaching consequences.

So, you may want to consider getting financial advice.

This article has been specifically designed and written for use by loveMONEY. This is not intended for investors: it is not personal advice or a recommendation to either invest or to refrain from investing.

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