UK Retirement Planning Calculator | Estimate Pension & Retirement Income
Retirement planning in the UK is structured around three primary components:
- State Pension,
- Workplace pension schemes, and
- Private savings.
Recent policy changes, including automatic enrolment and rising retirement ages, have shifted more responsibility for long-term income planning onto individuals.
Retirement income is typically derived from multiple sources, with outcomes influenced by contribution levels, tax treatment, investment performance, and withdrawal rules.
Retirement Details
Inputs your workplace pension, ISA savings, NI qualifying years, State Pension, and a simple drawdown projection.
Advanced details
Your total savings at retirement
You’re on track
- State Pension estimate —
- Projected income at retirement —
- Retirement gap / surplus —
- Planning note —
How to Fill Out Your Retirement Details

Current age: Enter your current age. This is used as the baseline for projecting the accumulation period before retirement.
Annual pre-tax income: You can enter total earnings before tax, including salary, bonuses, business income (eg, rent), and other taxable earnings.
Current retirement savings: Here, you’ll enter the total value of all dedicated retirement accounts, including workplace pensions and personal pensions (e.g., SIPPs). Exclude general cash unless specifically allocated for retirement.
ISA / accessible savings: The value of ISAs, cash savings, and other liquid investments. These are treated separately from pensions due to earlier access flexibility.
Monthly employee pension contribution: This is your personal monthly pension contribution, either as a fixed amount or a percentage of your salary. If percentage-based, it adjusts in line with income changes.
Employer pension contribution: Your employer's contribution rate as a percentage of salary.
Monthly ISA contribution: Enter monthly contributions to ISAs or other flexible investment accounts used for retirement or supplemental income.
Target retirement income: Your desired annual retirement income in today’s money, representing your expected lifestyle requirement.
Planned retirement age: Enter the age at which you expect to stop working and begin drawing retirement income. This will help with determining the accumulation period.
Planning age (life expectancy): This is how long you expect to live. So, enter the age to which retirement income should be projected, reflecting expected longevity and funding duration.
Pre-retirement rate of return: The expected annual investment growth rate before retirement, based on your asset allocation and risk profile.
Post-retirement rate of return: Enter the expected annual return during retirement, typically lower due to reduced portfolio risk.
Inflation rate: Expected annual inflation used to adjust future income and costs in real terms.
Annual salary increase: Your expected yearly salary growth, which impacts future contribution levels where income-linked.
National Insurance (NI) qualifying years: Total qualifying years toward State Pension eligibility, affecting projected entitlement.
State Pension age: Your expected age of State Pension access, typically aligned with government policy.
Full State Pension amount: Current full weekly State Pension value used for projection purposes.
Retirement spending adjustment: Select whether retirement spending should increase with inflation, maintaining real purchasing power over time.
Can You Retire At 62 And Get State Pension?
Before You Claim, See The Hidden Age Rules, Income Gaps, And What You Could Miss By Retiring Too Soon.
How WeathForSeniors UK Retirement Calculator Works?
This calculator projects retirement savings from today to retirement age by combining current balances, ongoing contributions, and long-term growth assumptions.
It models accumulation year by year, incorporating pension and ISA holdings, employee and employer contributions, salary progression, and inflation-adjusted investment returns.
At retirement, the model transitions to a drawdown phase.
It estimates how long accumulated assets may last by applying annual withdrawals based on the selected retirement income target, alongside projected State Pension income from State Pension age.
The results are then compared against projected funding needs to indicate a potential surplus or shortfall.
Key Assumptions
The projection is based on a fixed set of baseline assumptions used to standardise long-term modelling:
You can adjust any of these assumptions in the Advanced Details section to see how changes affect your projected retirement outcome.
Frequently Asked Questions About UK Retirement
What is the UK State Pension and how does it work?
The UK State Pension is a government retirement income based on your National Insurance record. It is payable at State Pension age and is designed as a baseline income rather than a full replacement for earnings. For many people in the new State Pension system, 35 qualifying years are needed for the full amount.
When can I retire in the UK?
There is no mandatory retirement age in the UK. You can keep working after State Pension age if you choose. The current State Pension age is 66 and is set to rise to 67 between 2026 and 2028. Most private and workplace pensions can usually be accessed from age 55, rising to 57 from 6 April 2028, unless a protected pension age applies.
How does a workplace pension work?
A workplace pension is usually built through auto-enrolment, with money coming from employee contributions, employer contributions, and tax relief. Contributions are typically invested, and retirement benefits may be taken as drawdown, an annuity, a lump sum, or a combination, depending on the scheme.
What is a SIPP and who is it for?
A SIPP, or Self-Invested Personal Pension, is a tax-advantaged pension wrapper that gives you wider control over investments. It is often used by self-employed people or investors who want more flexibility than a standard workplace pension. Funds are usually locked until the minimum pension access age.
How much money do I need to retire in the UK?
There is no fixed number. A common planning rule is to aim for around 20 to 25 times annual spending, but the right amount depends on your withdrawal rate, inflation, investment returns, retirement length, and lifestyle goals.
Should I rely only on the State Pension?
No. The State Pension is best treated as a foundation benefit, not your only source of retirement income. Most retirement plans combine the State Pension with a workplace pension, private savings, and other tax-efficient accounts such as ISAs or SIPPs.
References:
- https://www.gov.uk/plan-for-retirement
- https://www.gov.uk/plan-retirement-income
- https://www.gov.uk/state-pension
- https://www.moneyhelper.org.uk/en/pensions-and-retirement
