- Home
- »
- LGPS
- »
- Currently paying pension contributions
- »
- Types of retirement
Types of retirement
If you have two or more years’ membership in the Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS), you will receive an LGPS pension when you retire, payable for life.
The table below shows the different types of retirement from the LGPS.
Please note: The table mentions the current minimum retirement age of 55: by law, this is the lowest age you can start receiving your pension in good health. It doesn’t apply if you retire because of ill health. This minimum age is going up to 57 from 6th April 2028.
Normal retirement | Your normal retirement age is either your State Pension age, or 65 if later.
You can find out your State Pension Age here. If you start to take your pension at your normal retirement age, you will receive the full amount with no reductions. |
---|---|
Early retirement | If you leave between age 55 and normal retirement age, you can still receive your pension straight away.
The pension will be reduced because you are taking it early. The earlier you go, the lower your pension will be. Your retirement pack will give you the details. You don’t have to take the pension if you don’t want to. You can choose to defer the pension for now and receive it in the future. |
Late retirement | If you leave between normal retirement age and age 75, you can receive your pension straight away. The pension will be slightly higher because you are taking it later than expected. The later you go, the higher the pension will be.
If you continue to work beyond your 75th birthday, you must stop paying LGPS contributions and start receiving your pension. |
Redundancy or Efficiency of the Service | If you are over 55, then made redundant or leave due to efficiency of the service, you must receive your pension straight away. Currently, the pension will not be reduced for early payment.
Although the pension will not be reduced, it will not be enhanced either to give you the pension you could have built up if you carried on paying contributions until your normal retirement age. If you have paid extra contributions to improve the value of your pension, this part of your pension will be reduced if you go before normal retirement age. New rules are likely to come out limiting the total cost that your employer can pay for you to retire on redundancy or efficiency grounds. If you retire on redundancy or efficiency grounds after these new rules come out, it’s possible that your pension will be reduced if you take it early. We will update our website with details when more information is available. |
Flexible retirement | Flexible retirement allows you to start receiving the pension you have already built up and carry on working for the same employer and earn a salary. You would keep paying LGPS contributions and build up a second smaller pension for when you fully retire.
You must meet certain conditions before you can do this:
The pension will be reduced if you retire flexibly before normal retirement age. The earlier you go, the lower your pension will be. Your retirement pack will give you the details. |
Ill health retirement | If you need to leave your job due to ill health, you might receive your pension straight away.
Your employer will ask an independent doctor to confirm that:
There are three tiers of ill health retirement, depending on the ill health condition. In all three tiers, your pension would not be reduced for early payment. Tier 1
If you are receiving a Tier 3 pension and then become capable of gainful employment again, you must let your ex-employer know. Once your Tier 3 pension payments stop, you can start to receive them again at any point from age 55. Your pension will be reduced if you start to receive it again before normal retirement age. |
If you are over 55 and opt out of paying contributions, you cannot receive your pension straight away. You have to leave the job you opted out of first, unless you are age 75.
If you retire early, your benefits are reduced by a percentage for each year before normal retirement age:
Number of Years Paid Early | Reduction to Annual Pension | Reduction to Automatic Lump Sum |
---|---|---|
0 | 0% | 0% |
1 | 4.9% | 1.7% |
2 | 9.3% | 3.3% |
3 | 13.5% | 4.9% |
4 | 17.4% | 6.5% |
5 | 20.9% | 8.1% |
6 | 24.3% | 9.6% |
7 | 27.4% | 11.1% |
8 | 30.3% | 12.6% |
9 | 33.0% | 14.1% |
10 | 35.6% | 15.5% |
11 | 39.5% | Does not apply |
12 | 41.8% | Does not apply |
13 | 43.9% | Does not apply |
Rule of 85: If you qualify for the Rule of 85 and retire early, some of your pension will not be reduced.
You only qualify for the Rule of 85 if you were paying pension contributions into the LGPS before 1st October 2006. You meet the Rule of 85 if:
Your age when you take your LGPS benefits + The number of years you have paid pension contributions into LGPS for = 85 or more |
---|
If you meet the Rule of 85, it will automatically apply if you start your pension from age 60.
If you meet the Rule of 85 and want to take your pension before age 60, you need your employer's consent for it to apply. If your employer does not consent, you can still take your pension but it will be lower than if the Rule of 85 had applied.
The Rule of 85 works in this way:
Birth Date | Pension built up on or before 31st March 2008 | Pension built up between 1st April 2008 and 31st March 2016 | Pension built up between 1st April 2016 and 31st March 2020 | Pension built up on or after 1st April 2020 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Between 1st April 1956 and 31st March 1960 | Unreduced | Tapered: that is, partially reduced on a sliding scale | Tapered | Fully reduced |
On or after 1st April 1960 | Unreduced | Fully reduced | Fully reduced | Fully reduced |
Salary protection: For more information about this, please go to the working out your pension page on our website.
McCloud underpin: For more information about this, please go to the McCloud remedy page on our website.