Self-Employment

Self-Employed Pension Options UK 2026: SIPP, Nest & How Much to Save

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Self-employed workers miss out on one major advantage employed people have: automatic workplace pension enrolment with employer contributions. You have to do it yourself. The good news: a Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) comes with the same tax relief as a workplace pension, and setting one up takes under 30 minutes. Here's everything you need to know.

Tax Relief on Self-Employed Pension Contributions

For every £80 you contribute to a pension (basic-rate taxpayer), HMRC adds £20 in tax relief — making your contribution worth £100. That's an immediate 25% boost. Higher-rate taxpayers contributing £60 can claim an additional £20 back through Self Assessment, making the effective cost £60 for a £100 contribution. You can contribute up to 100% of your net earnings each year (capped at the annual allowance of £60,000 in 2025/26).

SIPP vs Nest for Self-Employed

NEST is the government-backed pension scheme originally designed for auto-enrolment. Self-employed people can now voluntarily join NEST — it's simple, low-cost (0.3% annual charge + 1.8% contribution charge on money going in), and suitable for straightforward pension saving. SIPPs offer more investment choice and flexibility but vary widely in fees. For small contributions, NEST's simplicity is appealing. For larger contributions or those who want to invest in specific funds, a SIPP from Vanguard (0.15% capped), Fidelity, or HL is worth considering.
  • NEST: government-backed, low fees for small pots, simple to use
  • Vanguard SIPP: low cost (0.15% capped at £375/year), excellent for index fund investors
  • HL SIPP: wide fund choice, higher fees (0.45% uncapped for funds)
  • Pension Bee: simple consolidation pension, transparent fees, 0.5–0.75%/year

How Much Should Self-Employed People Save?

The common rule: save 12–15% of your gross income into a pension if starting in your 30s, more if starting later. Adjust for the fact that you have no employer contribution — you're funding the full amount yourself. The state pension (currently ~£11,502/year) provides a baseline, qualifying with 35 qualifying NI years. Gap-fill analysis: project your expected retirement income needs, subtract State Pension, and work backwards to how much you need to save.
Can I claim pension contributions as a business expense?+

Sole traders: pension contributions are not a business expense but get personal tax relief via HMRC. Limited company directors: employer pension contributions made through the company ARE a deductible business expense, reducing Corporation Tax — making them very tax-efficient.

Can I contribute irregularly (in good months only)?+

Yes — unlike a workplace pension, a SIPP has no required minimum monthly payment. You can contribute lump sums when cash flow allows, which suits the variable income of many self-employed people.

Carry Forward — Using Unused Annual Allowance

If you've had years where you contributed little or nothing to a pension, you can 'carry forward' unused annual allowance from the previous 3 tax years. This allows large lump sum contributions in good income years. Example: if you had £30,000 unused allowance in each of the past 3 years plus this year's £60,000, you could potentially contribute up to £150,000 in a single year. You must have been a member of a registered pension scheme in those previous years.
#self employed pension#SIPP#Nest pension#freelancer retirement#pension UK

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