No Future DWP Increase for 450,000 State Pensioners Abroad
No Future DWP Increase for 450,000 State Pensioners

No future increases have been warned for thousands of Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) state pensioners. State pensioners planning to retire overseas this tax year could forgo more than £77,000 in state pension income over 20 years if they move to a country where payments are frozen.

New analysis from Rathbones, one of the UK’s leading wealth and asset management groups, reveals retirees who move abroad to certain countries - including Canada, Australia and New Zealand - will have state pension payments frozen at the rate first received, with no future increases.

Olly Cheng, a Financial Planning Divisional Lead at Rathbones, says: “We often speak to people hoping to retire overseas, many of whom don’t realise that this decision could significantly affect their state pension entitlement.

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“The state pension is uprated every year under the triple lock to help keep pace with the rising cost of living. If your pension is frozen when you move abroad, those increases stop entirely. Over time, inflation steadily eats away at its value, meaning your state pension buys less each year in real terms.

“What looks like a modest shortfall at first can quickly snowball into tens of thousands of pounds in lost income over retirement, and once your pension is frozen, there’s very little you can do to undo the damage.”

Cheng adds: “Anyone planning to retire abroad should start by checking their National Insurance record to make sure they’re entitled to the maximum state pension, particularly if future increases won’t apply.

“It’s also vital to understand how much private income you’ll need to replace any lost state pension, as well as factoring in local tax rules, healthcare costs and currency movements, all of which can materially affect how far your money stretches overseas.

“Given the complexity and the irreversible nature of some decisions, taking professional financial advice before committing to a move can help avoid costly mistakes later on.”

Around 450,000 British pensioners living overseas are already affected by the UK’s frozen pension policy. Rathbones’ analysis shows that over the decade since the new state pension was introduced in April 2016, a pensioner who retired that tax year to a country where the UK state pension is not uprated under the triple lock would have missed out on almost £19,400 in state pension payments simply because their pension was frozen.

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