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
SIPP vs Nest for Self-Employed
- •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?
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
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