Your pension is likely the biggest pot of money you will ever accumulate. That makes it a prime target for scammers. In the UK, pension scam victims lose an average of £75,000 — and for many, that money is gone for good. This guide explains how these scams work, the warning signs to watch for, and exactly what to do to keep your retirement savings safe.
How Pension Scams Work
Pension scammers use several tactics to get their hands on your retirement savings. Understanding these methods is the first step to protecting yourself.
Cold Calls
Unsolicited phone calls about your pension have been illegal since January 2019 under the Pension Scams (Protection of Free Gifts and Incentives) Act. Despite this, thousands of people still receive them every day. The calls may come from UK numbers, but scammers often use technology to spoof caller ID. They may claim to be from your existing pension provider, a government body, or a well-known financial firm.
If someone calls you out of the blue about your pension, it is almost certainly a scam. Hang up.
Free Pension Review Offers
Scammers often offer a “free pension review” to assess whether your current pension is performing well. In reality, the review is a sales pitch to transfer your pension into a scam vehicle. The review may appear professional — they might send you paperwork, have a polished website, or even hold meetings in legitimate-looking offices. The goal is always the same: to get you to move your money.
Legitimate pension advice is not free. If someone is offering a free review, ask yourself how they make their money.
Too-Good-to-Be-True Returns
Pension scammers promise returns that legitimate investments simply cannot deliver. They might claim:
- 10-20% annual returns with “no risk”
- Guaranteed income far above market rates
- Exclusive investment opportunities not available to the public
- Secret strategies that outperform the market
No legitimate investment can guarantee high returns with no risk. If it sounds too good to be true, it is.
Overseas Pensions
Some scammers encourage you to transfer your pension into an overseas pension scheme, often in jurisdictions with weak regulation. They may promise tax-free transfers, higher returns, or access to exotic investments. Once your money moves offshore, it becomes almost impossible to recover. These schemes may also trigger unexpected tax charges from HMRC.
Unregulated Investments
Scammers may steer your pension into unregulated investments such as:
- Storage pods and self-storage units
- Overseas property developments
- Green energy schemes
- Cryptocurrency
- Hotel rooms and holiday resorts
- Forex trading
These investments are often high-risk, illiquid, and unregulated — meaning you have no protection if things go wrong. The FSCS will not cover losses on unregulated investments.
Red Flags: Warning Signs
Watch for these patterns. If you spot any of them, stop and get independent advice before doing anything.
Unsolicited Contact
Any unexpected call, email, letter, or text about your pension is suspicious. Legitimate pension providers do not cold call. If you did not initiate the conversation, be extremely wary.
Pressure to Act Quickly
Scammers create urgency. They may say:
- “This offer expires today”
- “You need to act now before the tax rules change”
- “We have a limited number of places in this investment”
- “If you don’t transfer now, you’ll lose out”
Legitimate financial decisions should never be rushed. Take your time.
Guaranteed High Returns
No investment is risk-free. Any promise of guaranteed returns above what mainstream investments offer is a red flag. The higher the promised return, the higher the risk — and the more likely it is a scam.
No Paperwork
Scammers may discourage you from getting proper paperwork, or they may provide documents that look official but contain vague or misleading information. You should always receive clear documentation explaining fees, risks, investment details, and terms.
Complex Structures
If you cannot explain the investment to a friend in simple terms, it is probably too complex. Scammers use complexity to hide the fact that there is no legitimate investment. Watch for:
- Multiple layers of companies and jurisdictions
- Trusts with unusual names
- Investments linked to offshore entities
- Jargon-heavy documents that avoid giving straight answers
High-Pressure Sales Tactics
Beware of anyone who:
- Contacts you repeatedly
- Visits your home uninvited
- Offers incentives like free iPads, holidays, or cash bonuses
- Discourages you from seeking independent advice
- Tells you not to discuss the transfer with family or your existing provider
Real Examples: Pension Scam Cases
Harlequin Property
Harlequin Property was a scheme that encouraged UK investors, many of them pension savers, to invest in overseas property developments in the Caribbean and Southeast Asia. Investors were told they would receive guaranteed returns of 10-20% per year. The developments were largely unfinished, and the company eventually collapsed. Estimated losses exceeded £400 million. Many investors lost their entire pension savings. The case highlighted how scammers use professional marketing and overseas locations to make illegitimate schemes appear credible.
British Steel Pension Scam Scandal
When the British Steel Pension Scheme (BSPS) offered members a chance to transfer out of the scheme in 2017, scammers moved quickly. Over 8,000 steelworkers were encouraged to transfer their defined benefit pensions into SIPP products that invested in high-risk, unregulated investments. Many victims lost significant portions of their life savings. The scandal led to calls for stronger protections and resulted in the Financial Ombudsman ordering compensation in numerous cases. The key lesson: members of valuable defined benefit schemes are prime targets for scammers.
###other Notable Cases
- Blackmore Bond — a mini-bond scheme that promised high returns and targeted pension investors. The firm collapsed in 2020, leaving investors with losses of around £146 million.
- Options SIPP — a pension transfer scheme that moved thousands of people out of safe defined benefit pensions into risky investments. The operator was fined by the FCA.
- MGM International — a scheme that cold called pension savers and transferred their funds into unregulated investments including overseas property and forestry schemes.
How to Protect Yourself
Check the FCA Register
Before dealing with any financial firm, check the FCA Register at register.fca.org.uk. This tells you whether a firm is authorised and what it is authorised to do. If a firm is not on the register, do not deal with them.
You can also use the FCA’s ScamSmart tool at scamsmart.fca.org.uk to check whether an investment opportunity is flagged as a potential scam.
Don’t Rush
Take your time. Any legitimate adviser will give you space to think. If someone pressures you to make a decision on the spot, walk away. A good rule is to wait at least 24 hours before making any decision about your pension.
Get Independent Advice
For pension transfers, especially from a defined benefit scheme, you are required to take advice from a regulated financial adviser. Even if you are not required to, getting independent advice is the single best thing you can do to avoid a scam. An independent adviser:
- Is regulated by the FCA
- Has a legal duty to act in your best interest
- Will check the legitimacy of any investment
- Will explain the risks clearly
You can find an independent financial adviser through unbiased.co.uk or vouchedfor.co.uk.
Talk to Your Pension Provider
Before transferring, speak to your existing pension provider. They may be able to flag concerns or warn you about known scam vehicles.
Never Share Personal Information
Do not share your National Insurance number, pension details, bank details, or any personal information with anyone who contacts you unsolicited.
Use the Pension Wise Service
The government offers a free service called Pension Wise that provides guidance on your pension options. It is free, impartial, and available to anyone over 50. Book an appointment at moneyhelper.org.uk/pension-wise.
What to Do If You Have Been Scammed
If you think you have been targeted or have already transferred your pension to a scam scheme, act quickly.
Contact Your Pension Provider
Tell your pension provider immediately. If the transfer has not yet completed, they may be able to stop it. If it has completed, they can record the scam and may be able to assist with recovery efforts.
Report to the FCA
Report the scam to the Financial Conduct Authority:
- Phone: 0800 111 6768 (FCA helpline)
- Website: fca.org.uk/consumers/report-scam
- ScamSmart: scamsmart.fca.org.uk
Report to Action Fraud
Action Fraud is the UK’s national fraud reporting centre:
- Phone: 0300 123 2040
- Website: actionfraud.police.uk
- Available Monday to Friday, 8am to 8pm
Contact The Pensions Ombudsman
If you have a complaint about a regulated pension provider or adviser, The Pensions Ombudsman can investigate:
- Phone: 0800 917 4487
- Website: pensions-ombudsman.org.uk
Seek Free Help
- The Pensions Advisory Service: Free guidance on pension matters
- Age UK: Support and advice for older people, including pension scams
- Citizens Advice: Free, independent advice on your rights
Key Takeaways
- Pension cold calls have been illegal since 2019 — hang up on any unsolicited call about your pension
- Red flags include guaranteed high returns, pressure to act quickly, overseas investments, and no paperwork
- Always check firms on the FCA Register before dealing with them
- Get independent, regulated financial advice before any pension transfer
- Report scams to the FCA, Action Fraud, and The Pensions Ombudsman immediately
- Prevention is far better than cure — once your pension is gone, recovery is extremely difficult