Projected Pot by Salary
| Salary | Annual Contributions | Pot at 68 | Annual Income (4%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| £25,000 | £2,000 | £226,190 | £9,048 |
| £30,000 | £2,400 | £271,428 | £10,857 |
| £35,000 | £2,800 | £316,666 | £12,667 |
| £40,000 | £3,200 | £361,904 | £14,476 |
| £50,000 | £4,000 | £452,380 | £18,095 |
| £60,000 | £4,800 | £542,856 | £21,714 |
| £80,000 | £6,400 | £723,808 | £28,952 |
Assumes 5% employee + 3% employer contributions, 5% real investment growth, and retirement at 68. The 4% withdrawal rate is the standard rule of thumb for sustainable retirement income.
Plus state pension: Add approximately £12,000/year (£230/week) from the full state pension on top of your private pension.
Building Your Pension at Age 30
At 30, you have approximately 37 years until State Pension age (67). Starting or increasing pension contributions now gives your money the maximum time to benefit from compound growth. Even modest contributions of £200/month at 30 could grow to a substantial pot by retirement. The earlier you start, the less you need to contribute each month to reach the same target.
How Much Pension Pot Do You Need?
The PLSA (Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association) defines three retirement living standards: Minimum (approximately £14,400/year for a single person), Moderate (approximately £31,300/year), and Comfortable (approximately £43,100/year). After deducting the full State Pension (£11,502/year), a moderate lifestyle requires approximately £19,800/year from your private pension. Using the 4% drawdown rule, this requires a pot of approximately £495,000. A comfortable lifestyle requires approximately £31,600/year from private pension, needing a pot of approximately £790,000. See retirement calculator for personalised projections.