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investments · 7 min read

UK Pension Allowances 2025/26: Annual Allowance, Taper, Carry-Forward

By: CalculatorZone editorsPublished: 8 April 2025Updated: 22 November 2025

The rules around UK pensions changed substantially in 2024 when the Lifetime Allowance (LTA) was abolished. This guide covers what survived, what replaced it, and the key limits for 2025/26.

At a glance — 2025/26

Annual Allowance£60,000
Money Purchase AA (after flexi-access)£10,000
Tapered AA begins at£260,000 adjusted income
Minimum tapered AA£10,000
Carry-forward3 prior tax years
Lump Sum Allowance£268,275
Lump Sum & Death Benefit Allowance£1,073,100
Min. pension age (from 2028)57

Annual Allowance — the main cap

You can contribute up to £60,000 across all your pensions in one tax year and get tax relief on it (or up to 100% of your relevant UK earnings if lower). The contribution counts gross — including employer contributions, and grossed-up personal contributions for basic-rate relief.

Exceeding the AA doesn't block the contribution, but triggers an Annual Allowance charge at your marginal rate — effectively clawing back the relief. You report this via Self Assessment (or your scheme can pay it through Scheme Pays for larger charges).

The taper — for high earners

High-income individuals see the AA taper down: £1 reduction for every £2 of adjusted income above £260,000, to a floor of £10,000. "Adjusted income" broadly means all taxable income plus any pension contributions.

Tapered Annual Allowance
Adjusted incomeAA
≤ £260,000£60,000
£280,000£50,000
£300,000£40,000
£340,000£20,000
≥ £360,000£10,000 (floor)

Carry-forward — using unused AA from prior years

You can carry forward unused AA from the 3 prior tax years. For 2025/26 that means 2022/23, 2023/24 and 2024/25 — up to £180,000 of headroom on top of this year's £60k (subject to your earnings in the current year).

Requirements: you must have been a member of a UK registered pension scheme in each of those years (even if no contributions were made), and fill the current year's AA first.

What replaced the Lifetime Allowance

From 6 April 2024, the LTA and its 25%/55% charges were abolished. Two new allowances now govern what you can take tax-free:

  • Lump Sum Allowance (LSA): £268,275 — the max tax-free lump sum (the old 25% of £1,073,100)
  • Lump Sum & Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA): £1,073,100 — the max tax-free total across lump sums, including death benefits paid tax-free

Beyond these, you still take pension income taxed at your marginal rate — no standalone pension tax above the old LTA threshold.

When can you access a pension?

Minimum access age is 55 (rising to 57 from April 2028). From then, you can typically:

  • Take 25% as a tax-free lump sum (up to the LSA)
  • Buy an annuity (guaranteed income for life)
  • Use flexi-access drawdown (leave invested, take income as needed)
  • Take ad-hoc lump sums (25% of each tax-free, rest at marginal rate)
Flexibly accessing taxable pension income triggers the Money Purchase Annual Allowance of £10,000 — drastically lowering future pension contribution capacity. Think twice before drawing early.
Project your pot to retirement with the SIPP Calculator or the Retirement Savings Calculator.

Pensions and Inheritance Tax from April 2027

This is the single biggest pension policy change since the 2015 pension freedoms. From 6 April 2027, most unused defined-contribution pension pots will fall inside your estate for Inheritance Tax purposes. Historically pensions sat outside the estate and were a clean way to pass wealth down — that window closes at 2027.

  • Death before 75 — beneficiaries still draw with no income tax but 40% IHT may now apply first.
  • Death after 75 — beneficiaries pay marginal-rate income tax on withdrawals AND IHT may apply to the pot. Stacked effective rates can exceed 60%.
  • Planning shifts toward spending pensions first (instead of preserving them as bequest vehicles), and toward whole-of-life insurance in trust to cover the expected IHT bill.

Read the full treatment in our UK Inheritance Tax guide.