Be a pension millionaire!

Ed Bowsher
by Lovemoney Staff Ed Bowsher on 16 April 2013  |  Comments 13 comments

You could be a pension millionaire even though you never saved more than £300 a month for your retirement.

Be a pension millionaire!

If you start saving early enough, you could have a luxurious retirement. In fact, you could be a pension millionaire! Here’s how.....

The secret to building a big pension pot is to start saving early. That’s due to the miracle of compound interest.

Let’s imagine you have £1000 to spare and you put it in a savings account. The account pays 5% interest, so at the end of the year, you’ll have £1050. The following year, interest is paid at 5% on £1050, so your nest egg grows to £1102.50. In the third year, the balance rises to £1157.62. After thirty years, your balance has grown to £4322 and your annual 5% interest payment is £206.

The same principle applies to pensions. And if you start saving for your retirement in your 20s, your money has plenty of time to grow to become a substantial sum.

Growth

Before we look how much money you could make, we need to look at growth rates. I’m going to assume that the pension pot is wholly invested in the stock market. That’s because history suggests that shares are the top-performing asset class. Shares out-perform cash, bonds and even property.* If you look at shares since WW2, they’ve delivered an average annual gain of 5 to 6% a year. That’s a real-terms gain, on top of inflation.

Sure, shares are volatile. In some years, you’ll see big falls; some, big rises; others, not much movement at all. But over long periods of 20 years or more, shares have normally done well.

So let’s say you’re 22, and you’re able to pay £200 a month from your salary into your pension pot. At the end of that year, you’d have saved £2,400. The tax man would then pay in an extra £480 because basic rate taxpayers get 20% tax relief on pension contributions.

If that pension money then grew by 5% a year until you were 65, it would be worth £25,671 when you retired. That’s just one year’s contribution. Pretty good, huh?

As your career progresses, you contribute more. Here’s when your contributions rise:

Age

Contributions per month

22-26

£200 a month

27-31

£400 a month

32-41

£500 a month

42-65

£600 a month

The tax man continues to boost up your contributions by 20% each year, and gradually your pension pot grows. Then when you’re 65, your total pot reaches £1,040,170. Don’t forget that sum doesn’t include inflation, so it’s in today’s money.

Now I accept that the monthly pension contributions I’ve suggested will be too high for many people. But you might still become a pension millionaire whilst making much smaller contributions. That’s because your employer may also make contributions into your pension pot. If you’re lucky enough to work for an employer who will match your contribution pound-for-pound, your monthly contributions become much lower:

Age

Contributions per month

22-26

£100 a month

27-31

£200 a month

32-41

£250 a month

42-65

£300 a month

I think it’s pretty exciting that you could build up a million pound pension pot whilst making a maximum contribution of £300 a month – as long as you start early.

So what could you do with your million?

Current pension rules allow you to withdraw 25% of your capital as a lump sum, so you could take out £260,000 at 65 and spend it on whatever you want. The rest of your capital must be used to generate an income. Normally that’s done by buying an annuity. Right now, £780,000 could buy an annuity for a 65 year old that would pay £43,000 a year. So you’d receive £43,000 every year until you died. And if your health was poor, you could get a higher annual payment.

In other words, you’d be a prosperous pensioner. You’d have an annual income of £43,000 a year, you’d have a £280,000 lump sum, and you’d also receive whatever state pension was offered by the government at that time.

And here’s some more good news. The government is now rolling out auto-enrolment for pensions to almost all employees. Employers are being forced to make pension contributions for their staff as long as employees contribute too. Hopefully this means that most people will have reasonably comfortable retirements in the 2040s and beyond.

I should add that pensions is a complicated area. There lots of jargon and the pensions industry has used that jargon to bamboozle customers and sell them poor products. If you want to make the pensions system work for you, try and become as knowledgeable as you can. You can learn about some of the basics in my blog series: Become a pensions expert in five days. It might also be worth visiting a good Independent Financial Advisor (IFA.)

That said, my overall message is positive. If you save and invest sensibly, you could have a comfortable retirement. You might even have a million pound pension pot.

More: Help! In my forties and still no pension | The danger of using property as a pension

*Between 1959 and 2009, shares grew at 5.2% a year in real terms according to the Barclays Gilt Equity Study. Over the same period, house prices grew at 2.7% a year in real terms according to the Halifax House Price Study.

This is a classic article that has been updated.

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Comments (13)

  • UpHillAllTheWay
    Love rating 38
    UpHillAllTheWay said

    Well, it's a bit late for me to take advantage of compound interest - I'll could retire in January, but I have opted to stay on for a while past 65 - but what you get for a pension income depends on three things

    1 - How much you have saved

    2 - The interest rates (read that as Annuity rates) on the day you retire.

    3 - The state of the economy.

    To explain what I mean by point 3, when you are living your Autumn years, you are being supported by those still at work, the same as while you were working, you were supporting the generation before you. If relatively fewer people are working, or are working for less (eg because the £ has been allowed to devalue), then tax take is less, and there is less to share out. True, if you have saved more, you will get a bigger slice of whatever's going, but those Autumn years will only be an Indian Summer if conditions are right.

    Right now, they're not - hence the fact that I'm working a bit longer.

    If you want an easy retirement, saving is good, but a bit of good luck in the state of things when you start drawing that pension is all-important.

    Sheesh!!

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Axel
    Love rating 6
    Axel said

    I think it was Einstein who stated the most powerfull thing in the Universe is Compounding!

    I use this to my advantage in my business plan.

    To surely create an income that most people dream of, but few achieve. I have found a way by putting the power of compounding at work by helping many people to do little.

    I would rather reap the reward of 1% of 100 peoples work, than 100% of my own. Its about a lot of people doing a little, all working together, than struggling on your own. Using leverage to give you more free time to do the things you really want to do.

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • grelly
    Love rating 27
    grelly said

    It's all very well saving for 30 years, but people need somewhere to live. You can either rent for your whole life (in which case, you will need a sizeable pension to pay for rent in retirement), or you can pay a mortgage for 25 years. Either way, this is going to chew up a large portion of your salary thoughout those vital 30 years.

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • IFAPaul
    Love rating 2
    IFAPaul said

    A simple scenario is if you spend half your income on a repayment mortgage and a pension then when you retire you only need to have built enough in your pension pot to provide a pension half the size of your salary.

    Furthermore, if you are retiring at state pension age then you wouldn't need to have built up enough for half as you will also have the state pension.

    As I said it's a simple scenario that I appreciate won't work for all but does seem a good basis to work from

    Of course what you need to get your pension there is a good IFA to manage it for you and favourable market conditions when you retire.

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Axel
    Love rating 6
    Axel said

    If you could work an extra hour on each working day for no pay for the next 3 years, and then you could retire on full pay no matter what age you are. Would you do it?

    I think most people would. This is what you can get if you understand and apply Multi Level Marketing.

    Whats easier for you, to work fulltime for the rest of your life, answering to your boss, working with people you dont like, maybe have 4 weeks holiday a year, just to retire at 65 to 70 on a state pension thats not in your control.

    'Or'

    Learn a proven system committing 5 hours per week for the next 3 years?

    Average working life 40 to 50 years = State pension. what joy!

    3 years of little but constant effort 5 hours per week = Residual income NOW!

    The choice is yours! 

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • DP130132
    Love rating 20
    DP130132 said

    Yesterday - 8.12.2010 -  on Sky News Busines Report, it was stated that researchers had analysed the facts, and reported ONE THIRD of your pension POT, disappeared in charges and fees, across the board.

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Kaz64
    Love rating 22
    Kaz64 said

    DP130132, I read that in the papers... just doesn't give me any incentive at all to hand over my hard earned cash to a pension company....it's not until its too darn late, that you could find out you arn't going to get what you hoped from your pension.

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • DP130132
    Love rating 20
    DP130132 said

    Is there one person out there who religeously put there savings into a Private pension scheme, was then forced to buy an annuity, and now lives on the income therefrom, who can say their pension lives up to the expectations and prophecies?    Let us hear from you all!!! 

    Report on 09 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Ed Bowsher
    Love rating 79
    Ed Bowsher said

    Hello everyone,

    Thanks for the comments. I'm going to reply to a couple. First off, I agree with uphillalltheway that luck does come into it. The luckiest scenario is that inflation and interest rates are high when you buy your level annuity, and then as soon as you've bought your annuity, inflation and interest rates start to tumble at speed.

    Then you'll be earning a high annuity rate, and your income won't be eroded by high inflation. Needless to say, that's not what's happening at the moment. Annuity rates are low yet inflation could rise in the years to come.

    Moving on, there's the issue of charges eroding the value of pension pots. That's a big issue and it's a scandal that so much of financial services industry still insists on charging so much for its products.

    That said, you can save for your retirement without having any contact with the big pension providers. Instead of saving into a pension, you could put your money into ISAs and invest in low-cost trackers. Then you'll get stock market growth at a low cost and you'll have complete control of your pot. The only downside is that you don't get any tax relief on your pension contributions.

    Alternatively, if you're able to manage your pension yourself as a sipp, you can once again have the control and put your investments into low cost homes. Sadly though, not everyone has the opportunity to save into a SIPP.

    I also hope that NEST will gradually drive down pension costs although I know that will take a while. Charges in the early years of the scheme will be quite high thanks to the set-up costs of the scheme.

    Regards,

    Ed

    Report on 10 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • DP130132
    Love rating 20
    DP130132 said

    IF, and its a big big IF, you had pension income of £49.000 p.a. in 40 years time you would be taxed on your income at the maximum rate - soon repaying any tax relief offers you take at present. Even if you emigrated to a tax haven, the pension is still earned in UK, and tax deducted at source.

    PLUS: You would be locking up that capital (your savings) with NO ESCAPE for the total period. 

    Report on 10 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Ed Bowsher
    Love rating 79
    Ed Bowsher said

    Hi DP,

    Yes, when you take income from your pension pot, you're taxed. Whereas with an ISA, you won't have to pay any income tax when you take the income. I'd prefer to have the tax relief early (as happens with a pension) rather than late (as happens with an ISA). That's because if I get the extra money early, I can invest it and let it grow.

    I'd also point out that you'd only be paying 40% tax on a small portion of the £49,000. At current rates, everything above £43,876. I think many pensioners would be extremely happy with an annual income of £49,000 plus their state pension. If they've also paid off their mortgage, they could have a very nice lifestyle.

    But as I say, if you don't like the lack of flexibility, save in an ISA. The most important point is that people should save for their retirement.

    Ed

    Report on 10 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • hippobank
    Love rating 7
    hippobank said

    still in my early 30s and unsure if a pension is right for me, as many have pointed out 1/3 of it gets taken up in fees and expenses. There are a few that you can manage yourself, but even then you have to pay 1.5 to 5% for that luxury! still better than 33%

    I feel if you can fill your cash ISA then start paying into your shares ISA limit and try hard not to touch it, year on year you will be much better off than you would be with 90% of the pensions on the market.

    a friends father retired with a nice healthy pension, 3 days later the global crash happened, forcing him back to work. Thankfully he didn't panic and just pull everything out, like many did, but it's still no where near what it was the day he retired. 

    Share ISAs can do much the same thing obviously, big difference is many don't charge as much for the accounts, and you don't pay tax.

    I guess all the hype about pensions in the news at present; is the fact baby boomers (some of the biggest contributors to pensions) are starting to retire and the pension companies are saying "hey we don't have enough to pay them, as younger people aren't saving". 

    I really don't want to be starting a pension just to plug holes in a companies books to pay for the bad judgements by these companies.

    Report on 13 December 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Wasyl
    Love rating 0
    Wasyl said

    I've read the article and the comments, there is one thing we never ever really hear or see about pensions into which we save, rather than our Government pension.

    I save all this money, come retirement I start drawing my eagerly and selflessly saved money. 2 years later I die. Fortunately I have a wife who'll be able to get something from it, although not the same as if I were alive to receive it. She then dies a few year's later what happens to all that money that was squirelled away over 15, 20, 30 or even 40 years? Does anything get given to the children?

    Report on 01 January 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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