When you retire, you need to decide how to turn your pension pot into an income. Pension drawdown is one of the most flexible options — it lets you take money from your pension while keeping the rest invested. This guide covers everything you need to know about accessing your pension in the UK.
What Is Pension Drawdown?
Pension drawdown means taking money from your defined contribution pension while keeping the remaining funds invested. Unlike an annuity, which converts your pot into a guaranteed income for life, drawdown gives you control over when and how much you withdraw.
The money stays invested, so it can grow — but it can also fall in value. You need to manage withdrawals carefully to make sure your pot lasts as long as you need it to.
Drawdown vs Annuity
| Feature | Drawdown | Annuity |
|---|---|---|
| Flexibility | Take income as and when you need it | Fixed payments for life |
| Investment risk | Yes — pot can fall in value | No — guaranteed income |
| Control | High — you choose withdrawal amounts | None — payments are set |
| Inheritance | Remaining pot passes to beneficiaries | Usually stops on death |
| Guaranteed income | No | Yes |
Minimum Age for Pension Drawdown
You can normally access your pension from age 55. This is rising to 57 from April 2028 under government plans. There are exceptions if you have serious ill health or a protected pension age.
Tax-Free Cash: The 25% Lump Sum
You can take 25% of your pension pot tax-free, up to a maximum of £268,275. This is known as the pension commencement lump sum (PCLS).
The remaining 75% is taxed as income when you withdraw it. The tax you pay depends on your total income and which tax band you fall into.
Tax Rates on Drawdown Income
| Tax Band | Annual Income (2024/25) | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | Up to £12,570 | 0% |
| Basic Rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 20% |
| Higher Rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 40% |
| Additional Rate | Over £125,140 | 45% |
Types of Drawdown
Flexi-Access Drawdown
This is the most common option. You take your 25% tax-free cash upfront, then draw income from the remaining 75% whenever you need it. You can stop and start withdrawals at any time.
Fixed Drawdown
You take a fixed amount each year, which you can change annually. This gives you a predictable income but less flexibility than flexi-access.
Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum (UFPLS)
With UFPLS, you take money directly from your pension without first taking the tax-free lump sum. Each withdrawal is:
- 25% tax-free
- 75% taxed as income
This can be useful if you want to take small, regular amounts without committing to a full drawdown arrangement.
Annuity: An Alternative to Drawdown
An annuity is a financial product you buy with your pension pot that pays you a guaranteed income for life. It removes investment risk but also removes flexibility.
Types of Annuity
- Lifetime annuity: Pays income for the rest of your life
- Fixed-term annuity: Pays income for a set period (e.g., 10 years)
- Enhanced annuity: Offers higher rates if you have health conditions
- Investment-linked annuity: Income can rise or fall based on investment performance
When to Consider an Annuity
- You want guaranteed income you can’t outlive
- You have health conditions that qualify for enhanced rates
- You have no dependants and don’t need to leave money behind
- You don’t want to manage investments in retirement
Investment Strategy in Drawdown
Once your money is in drawdown, you need to decide how to invest it. The key challenge is that your pot needs to last 25–30 years or more, while also providing you with income.
Conservative Approach (Recommended for Most Retirees)
- 40–60% stocks for growth
- 40–60% bonds for stability
- 5–10% cash for short-term income needs
Why a Conservative Strategy Works
- Stocks provide growth to combat inflation
- Bonds reduce volatility and provide income
- Cash buffer means you don’t have to sell investments during market downturns
The 4% Rule
A common guideline is to withdraw no more than 4% of your pot per year. This gives your investments a chance to grow and helps ensure your money lasts.
State Pension
The State Pension is separate from your private pension. In 2024/25, the full new State Pension is £221.20 per week (around £11,500 per year). You need 35 qualifying years of National Insurance contributions to get the full amount.
You claim the State Pension separately from your private pension — it doesn’t happen automatically.
Qualifying Years
- You need at least 10 qualifying years to get any State Pension
- 35 qualifying years for the full amount
- Gaps in your National Insurance record reduce your payment
Worked Example: 60-Year-Old with £500,000 Pension Pot
Let’s look at a practical example to show how drawdown works in practice.
The Numbers
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total pension pot | £500,000 |
| Tax-free cash (25%) | £125,000 |
| Remaining pot in drawdown | £375,000 |
| Annual withdrawal | £20,000 |
| Investment growth | 5% per year |
How Long Does the Pot Last?
At 5% growth and £20,000 annual withdrawals, your pot of £375,000 would last approximately 25 years — taking you to age 85.
Tax on Withdrawals
- Annual withdrawal: £20,000
- Personal allowance: £12,570 (0% tax)
- Taxable amount: £7,430
- Tax at 20%: £1,486 per year
If you also receive the full State Pension (£11,500), your total income would be £31,500. The taxable amount above your personal allowance would be £18,930, giving you a tax bill of £3,786 per year.
Total Retirement Income
| Source | Annual Amount |
|---|---|
| Drawdown income | £20,000 |
| State Pension | £11,500 |
| Total | £31,500 |
Tips for Pension Drawdown
- Consider an annuity for guaranteed income — even a partial annuity can cover essential expenses
- Keep some pension invested for growth — don’t convert everything to cash
- Don’t withdraw too much too quickly — 4% per year is a sensible guideline
- Consider tax implications — withdrawing large amounts can push you into a higher tax band
- Seek financial advice — a regulated financial adviser can help you plan your retirement income
- Use your tax-free cash wisely — pay off debts or invest in an ISA for tax-free growth
- Keep a cash buffer — hold 1–2 years of income in cash to avoid selling investments during downturns
Free Guidance: Pension Wise
Before making any decisions, get free, impartial guidance from Pension Wise:
- Phone: 0800 135 3300
- Online: Book at pensionwise.gov.uk
- Face-to-face: Available across the UK
This is guidance, not advice — they’ll explain your options and help you think through your decisions.