Savings & Investing

How Pension Drawdown Is Calculated

How UK pension drawdown works: tax-free lump sum, income tax on withdrawals, pot longevity, and withdrawal rate sustainability.

Verified against HMRC — Tax on your private pension: drawdown on 16 Feb 2026 Updated 16 February 2026 4 min read
Open calculator

Translation unavailable — this article is shown in English. View English version

Summary

Pension drawdown (formally “flexi-access drawdown”) lets you keep your defined-contribution pension pot invested while withdrawing income as needed. Available from age 55 (rising to 57 from April 2028), it replaced the old annuity-or-nothing model when pension freedoms launched in April 2015.

The key question this calculator answers: “How long will my pension pot last, and what will I actually take home after tax?”

How it works

Pension drawdown has three main mechanics:

1. Tax-free lump sum (PCLS)

You can take up to 25% of your pension pot as a tax-free Pension Commencement Lump Sum (PCLS), subject to the Lump Sum Allowance of £268,275. This allowance is a lifetime cap across all your pensions — it replaced the old Lifetime Allowance (abolished April 2024).

2. Taxable income withdrawals

Everything withdrawn beyond the PCLS is taxed as earned income at your marginal rate. Crucially, pensioners do not pay National Insurance on pension income — only income tax applies.

Your total taxable income for the year includes:

  • Pension drawdown withdrawals
  • State Pension (£11,973/year for a full 35-year record in 2025/26)
  • Any other income (rental, part-time work, etc.)

3. Remaining pot stays invested

The pot you don’t withdraw remains invested. Growth compounds tax-free inside the pension wrapper. The balance between withdrawals and investment growth determines how long your pot lasts.

The formulas

PCLS = min(pot × 0.25, £268,275)

Where

pot= Total pension pot value (£)
0.25= 25% tax-free entitlement
£268,275= Lump Sum Allowance — lifetime cap on tax-free lump sums
Year-end pot = (pot_start + growth) − gross_drawdown

Where

pot_start= Pot value at the start of the year
growth= pot_start × investment_return_rate
gross_drawdown= Annual withdrawal before tax (increases with inflation each year)
Net income = gross_drawdown − income_tax + state_pension

Where

gross_drawdown= Annual withdrawal from pension pot
income_tax= Tax on drawdown income at marginal rates (no NI)
state_pension= Annual State Pension — taxable but adds to take-home

Income tax on drawdown (2025/26)

BandTaxable incomeRate
Personal AllowanceUp to £12,5700%
Basic rate£12,571 – £50,27020%
Higher rate£50,271 – £125,14040%
Additional rateOver £125,14045%

The Personal Allowance tapers by £1 for every £2 of income above £100,000, creating an effective 60% marginal rate in the £100,000–£125,140 band.

Withdrawal rate sustainability

The effective withdrawal rate (annual drawdown / pot after PCLS) is a key indicator of whether your pot will last:

Withdrawal rateAssessmentBased on
≤ 3.5%Sustainable — very likely to last 30+ yearsBengen (1994), UK-adjusted
3.5% – 5%Moderate risk — review annuallyTrinity Study
> 5%High risk of depletionHistorical failure rates

Worked examples

£300k pot, £15k/yr drawdown, full State Pension

1

Tax-free lump sum (25%)

£300,000 × 25% = £75,000

= £75,000

2

Pot after PCLS

£300,000 − £75,000 = £225,000

= £225,000

3

Effective withdrawal rate

£15,000 / £225,000 = 6.67%

= 6.67% (unsustainable)

4

Year 1 total income

£15,000 drawdown + £11,973 State Pension = £26,973

= £26,973

5

Year 1 income tax

(£26,973 − £12,570) × 20% = £14,403 × 20% = £2,881

= £2,881

6

Year 1 net income

£15,000 − £2,881 + £11,973 = £24,092

= £24,092 (£2,008/month)

Result

With 4% returns and 2% inflation, the pot lasts approximately 19 years (until age 84).

£500k pot, no lump sum, £20k/yr drawdown

1

Tax-free lump sum

Not taken — full pot stays invested

= £0

2

Effective withdrawal rate

£20,000 / £500,000 = 4.0%

= 4.0% (moderate)

3

Year 1 investment growth

£500,000 × 4% = £20,000

= £20,000

4

Year 1 pot change

Growth £20,000 − withdrawal £20,000 = £0 net change

= Pot stays at £500,000 in Year 1

5

Year 1 total income (drawdown + SP)

£20,000 + £11,973 = £31,973; tax = (£31,973 − £12,570) × 20% = £3,881

= Net: £28,092 (£2,341/month)

Result

With inflation-adjusted drawdown at 2%, the pot eventually depletes as withdrawals grow faster than returns — but lasts well beyond 30 years.

Inputs explained

  • Pension pot — the total value of your defined-contribution pension at the point of entering drawdown
  • Annual drawdown — how much you plan to withdraw each year (before tax). This increases annually by the inflation rate to maintain purchasing power
  • Investment return rate — expected nominal annual return on the invested pot. 4–5% is a common assumption for a balanced portfolio
  • Inflation rate — annual rate at which your drawdown amount increases. 2% matches the Bank of England target
  • Annual State Pension — the full new State Pension is £11,973/year (2025/26). Reduce if you have fewer than 35 qualifying years
  • Other annual income — any other taxable income (rental, part-time work, other pensions). Affects your tax bracket
  • Take 25% lump sum — whether to take the PCLS upfront. Taking it reduces the invested pot but provides immediate tax-free cash
  • Drawdown start age — when you begin withdrawing. Currently must be at least 55 (57 from April 2028)
  • Life expectancy — how long you need the pot to last. ONS average is ~87 for a 65-year-old; plan conservatively

Outputs explained

  • Monthly net income — your actual take-home each month (drawdown after tax + State Pension)
  • Pot longevity — how many years the pot lasts, or “indefinitely” if growth exceeds withdrawals
  • Tax-free lump sum — the PCLS amount (25% of pot, capped at £268,275)
  • Withdrawal rate — annual drawdown as a percentage of the pot after PCLS, with a sustainability verdict
  • Year-by-year schedule — detailed projection showing gross withdrawal, tax, net income, and remaining pot for each year

Assumptions & limitations

  • Uses England/Wales/NI income tax bands. Scotland has different rates (starter 19%, intermediate 21%, advanced 45%, top 48%). The calculator does not currently model Scottish tax.
  • State Pension is assumed constant — in practice it increases annually by the triple lock (highest of inflation, wage growth, or 2.5%).
  • Investment returns are applied annually at a flat nominal rate. Real portfolios experience sequence-of-returns risk — poor returns early in drawdown are far more damaging than poor returns later.
  • No platform fees or fund charges are modelled. Typical annual charges of 0.5–1% reduce effective returns.
  • Drawdown increases uniformly with inflation. In practice, retirees often spend more early (“go-go” years) and less later (“slow-go” years).
  • Tax bands are frozen at 2025/26 levels. The government has frozen thresholds until 2028; beyond that, fiscal drag will change effective rates.
  • The calculator does not model the Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA) — once you flexibly access pension income, future pension contributions are limited to £10,000/year.

Verification

Test caseInputExpectedActualSource
PCLS below cap£300k pot, take lump sum£75,000 tax-free£75,00025% × £300k
PCLS at cap£2M pot, take lump sum£268,275 tax-free£268,275LSA cap per gov.uk
Basic rate tax£15k drawdown + £11,973 SP£2,881 tax£2,881Manual: (£26,973 − £12,570) × 20%
Higher rate tax£60k drawdown + £11,973 SP + £20k other£24,221 total tax£24,221Manual: £7,540 + £16,681
Zero return, no inflation£225k pot, £15k/yr, 0% returnDepleted in 15 years15 years£225k / £15k

Sources

pension drawdown retirement tax-free-lump-sum pcls withdrawal-rate income-tax