Pensions for Self-Employed UK 2025/26: Best Options, Tax Relief & How Much to Save
Nobody's going to set up a workplace pension for you. That's the deal when you're self-employed — total freedom, total responsibility. The good news: the tax relief on pension contributions is genuinely one of the best deals available to UK freelancers. Here's how to use it.
Why Self-Employed People Need to Sort Their Pension
Employed people get auto-enrolled into workplace pensions with employer contributions. Self-employed people get... nothing. No auto-enrolment. No employer match. No nudge.
The result: according to the ONS, only 20% of self-employed people contribute to a pension, versus 88% of employees. That's a retirement crisis waiting to happen.
The State Pension (currently about £11,500/year at full rate) won't cover a comfortable retirement. You need your own pot — and the sooner you start, the less it costs thanks to compounding.
Your Pension Options
1. Personal Pension (SIPP)
A Self-Invested Personal Pension is the most popular choice for self-employed people. You choose your provider, pick your investments, and contribute whenever you want.
- Flexibility: Contribute monthly or lump sums. No minimum. Increase, decrease, or pause anytime.
- Investment choice: Full range — index funds, ETFs, individual shares, bonds
- Tax relief: 20% added automatically. Higher-rate taxpayers claim extra via Self Assessment.
- Best for: Self-employed people who want control and flexibility
Top SIPP providers: Vanguard (lowest fees for index funds), Pension Bee (simplest), AJ Bell (good all-rounder), Hargreaves Lansdown (widest choice, higher fees).
2. Stakeholder Pension
A simpler, more regulated version of a personal pension. Fees are capped at 1.5% (dropping to 1% after 10 years). Limited investment choices but lower costs guaranteed.
- Best for: People who want a "set and forget" option with fee protection
- Downside: Fewer investment options than a SIPP
3. NEST (National Employment Savings Trust)
Originally designed for auto-enrolment, but self-employed people can join voluntarily. Government-backed, low fees (0.3% annual management charge after a 1.8% contribution charge).
- Best for: Very small contributions, trust in government-backed schemes
- Downside: Limited investment options, contribution charge on each payment
How Pension Tax Relief Works
This is the part most freelancers don't fully understand — and it's brilliant.
When you contribute to a pension, the government adds money on top:
| Your tax rate | You pay in | Government adds | Total in your pension |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic rate (20%) | £800 | £200 | £1,000 |
| Higher rate (40%) | £800 | £200 auto + £200 via SA | £1,000 (effective cost: £600) |
Basic rate taxpayers: Your provider claims the 20% automatically. You pay £800, £1,000 lands in your pension. Nothing to do on your tax return.
Higher rate taxpayers: The provider claims the first 20%. You claim the additional 20% on your Self Assessment. Effectively, £1,000 in your pension only costs you £600.
Annual limit: You can contribute up to £60,000 per year (or 100% of your earnings, whichever is lower) and receive tax relief. Unused allowance carries forward for up to 3 years.
How Much Should You Contribute?
The classic rule of thumb: halve the age you start and contribute that percentage of your income.
- Start at 25 → contribute 12.5% of income
- Start at 30 → contribute 15%
- Start at 40 → contribute 20%
That feels steep when you're freelancing and income varies. A more practical approach:
- Start with something. £100/month is better than £0/month. You can always increase later.
- Percentage of profit, not revenue. Calculate after expenses, not before.
- Use good months to catch up. Had a bumper quarter? Lump sum into your pension before the tax year ends.
- Treat it as a non-negotiable expense. Pay your pension before you pay yourself.
Timing: When to Contribute
Two strategies:
Monthly standing order: Set it and forget it. Smooths out market timing. Best for consistency.
Annual lump sum before April 5th: Wait until you know your profit for the year, then contribute strategically. Best for maximising tax relief at the right rate.
Many self-employed people do a bit of both: monthly minimum + annual top-up.
Pension vs ISA: Which First?
Both are tax-efficient. The key differences:
| Pension | ISA | |
|---|---|---|
| Tax relief on contributions | Yes (20–45%) | No |
| Tax-free growth | Yes | Yes |
| Access before 57 | No (pension age rising to 57 in 2028) | Anytime |
| Tax on withdrawal | 25% tax-free, rest taxed as income | Fully tax-free |
General advice: Pension first for retirement savings (the tax relief is too good to ignore). ISA for money you might need before retirement. Both if you can afford it.
Common Mistakes
- Doing nothing because income varies. Contribute what you can. Something beats nothing.
- Not claiming higher-rate relief. If you pay 40% tax, claim the extra 20% on your Self Assessment. Free money.
- Paying high fees. A 1.5% annual fee vs 0.15% fee can cost you tens of thousands over 30 years. Use a low-cost index fund in a low-cost SIPP.
- Forgetting carry-forward. If you had low earnings in previous years, you can use up to 3 years of unused allowance in one big contribution.
Getting Started: Step by Step
- Choose a SIPP provider (Vanguard or PensionBee for simplicity)
- Open the account (takes 10 minutes online)
- Pick a fund (a global index tracker like Vanguard FTSE Global All Cap is a solid default)
- Set up a monthly direct debit (start with whatever you can afford)
- Note the contribution on your Self Assessment / MTD quarterly update
That's it. Future you will be grateful.