Are you in line for a £29k pension boost? Government plans could leave millions better off

Reforms to retirement savings will see savers’ small pots brought together and the creation of pensions ‘megafunds’

woman looking at paperwork and a laptop
Are you in line for a £29k pension boost? Government plans could leave millions better off
(Image credit: Johner Images)

Workers on an average salary who save into a pension could be £29,000 better off by the time they retire under government plans to reform Britain’s retirement savings system.

The figure is the estimated individual impact on 20 million savers’ pension pots through a series of government reforms included in the Pension Schemes Bill, which returns to Parliament for its second reading today (7 July).

Measures in the Bill mean that an average man at the start of their career earning just over £37,000 could see up to £31,000 more in their retirement fund by the time they retire.

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“The measures in our Pension Schemes Bill will drive costs down and returns up on workers’ retirement savings – putting more money in people’s pockets to the tune of up to £29,000 for an average earner and delivering on our Plan for Change.”

Other measures include simplifying retirement choices, with all pension schemes offering default routes to an income in retirement. Plus allowing defined benefit (DB) pension schemes to invest a collective £160 billion in surplus they are holding, for the benefit of pension savers.

Laura Miller

Laura Miller is an experienced financial and business journalist. Formerly on staff at the Daily Telegraph, her freelance work now appears in the money pages of all the national newspapers. She endeavours to make money issues easy to understand for everyone, and to do justice to the people who regularly trust her to tell their stories. She lives by the sea in Aberystwyth. You can find her tweeting @thatlaurawrites