The mistake that could wreck your retirement

Here's why a budget cut back could prove to be a costly mistake.
There's no question juggling your finances isn't always easy. And with inflation pushing the cost of living higher, making our cash last is becoming ever more difficult. We all look to cope in different ways, whether that means relying on credit, or cutting some of our expenditure.
However, there are some things, like life insurance and pension contributions, that are best left untouched.
Unless there’s absolutely no way you can keep up with your pension contributions, cutting back or stopping them entirely could be a very costly mistake.
Just take a look at the figures below which show the impact on your final pension fund if you trim back your monthly contributions from £200 to £100 or £50:
Cutting back
Contribution paid each month |
£200 |
£100 |
£50 |
Total invested over 35 years |
£84,000 |
£42,000 |
£21,000 |
Value at retirement after 35 years @ 7% annual growth |
£153,070 |
£76,535 |
£38,267 |
Tax-free cash @ 25% of the accumulated fund |
£38,267 |
£19,134 |
£9,567 |
Annual income in retirement* |
£5,283 |
£2,642 |
£1,320 |
Source: Hargreaves Lansdown. *Figures are based on the payout from a standard annuity for a male, aged 65 providing a level income which is guaranteed to pay out for a minimum of 5 years. No spouse’s benefits have been included.
Before I talk about the table, I want to make it clear that the figures are shown in ‘today’s money’. This means they have been adjusted to take into account the effect of inflation over time. In this example, inflation is assumed to compound annually at 2.5% (although this may seem low in the current climate).
If you've left your pension planning to the eleventh hour, find out how to catch up quick.
So back to the figures -- it takes no great genius to work out the more you put into your pension, the more you’ll get out. But hang on a minute -- what if you haven’t even started your pension yet? You may be very tempted to put it off with so many other drains on your finances. But this could have a devastating effect on your standard of living in retirement.
The figures below show how much your pension fund will shrink, if you delay for five years, assuming you retire at 65.
Losing a third off your pension fund
Contribution paid each month |
£200 |
£100 |
£50 |
---|---|---|---|
Value at retirement if you start saving at 30 |
£153,070 |
£76,535 |
£38,267 |
Value at retirement if you start saving at 35 |
£105,258 |
£52,629 |
£26,315 |
Cost of waiting five years |
£47,812 |
£23,906 |
£11,952 |
Source: Hargreaves Lansdown. Assumed annual growth rate is 7%.
As you can see, postponing your pension savings for five years could easily knock one-third off the final value of your pension fund by the time you reach 65. Sure, by delaying your contributions for five years you would have saved a few thousand pounds, but that’s really little compensation for what you’re left with at retirement.
Let’s say you start to pay £200 a month into your pension at the age of 30, rather than waiting until 35. True, you would paid £12,000 more in contributions over those five years -- but even taking that into account -- your final pension would still be worth nearly £36,000 more.
I don’t want to doom-monger too much. If you delay your pension until you reach your mid-thirties, there are still plenty of working years left to build up a reasonable pot by the time your retire. But the longer you leave it, the less time there is to make up missed contributions.
Already fifty?
If you have already reached your fifties but you still haven’t done anything about planning for your retirement, you need to take action now. Read 5 top tips for pension late starters for some hints on how to make up for lost time.
In an ideal world we would all start paying a modest amount into a pension at 18, which would provide a pretty decent pension pot at 65. But we don’t live in an ideal world, and inflation is making it even worse. But please try to think of your pension as an essential bill which has to be paid too. Also be sure to have a read of Treble the size of your pension .
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Comments
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Because £56 per month is better than nothing, Amaliapa, that's how! The point of the article is to tell people exactly what you have found: you need a lot of money to fund retirement, so you'd better start accumulating it as young as you can. I try to convince our children that since three of them are getting perilously close to 30 it's high time they took pension contributions seriously - halve your age and contribute that percentage of your income, I say - but they're more interested in saving up the deposit for a house. So then, no doubt, they'll be unable to invest in pension because they have a mortgage to pay and a house to maintain. Then they'll be spending all their money on children. Before they know it they'll be 50 with no pension pot. Just like their parents. They know we can't retire yet because we don't have pension provision, but STILL they don't see it!
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H-L seem to have conveniently ignored wage-inflation, which will probably be higher than cost-of-living inflation, in their scare-mongering. Don't forget H-L are very successful at grinding their own axe. If you pay £100 a month now into your pension fund, you should be paying in a lot more in 5/10/20 years time, assuming your contributions are then the same proportion of your earnings, especially if you have climbed the salary ladder.
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what about people that only started late to pay into a pension do they not count ? I payed into a private pension thinking I was doing my self a big service only to find out that my £16000 fund would amount to only £56 a month for a garuntee of 10 years only , so how can that encourage anyone to invest ?
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16 March 2011