Pension Consolidation Traps to Avoid: What to Check Before You Transfer

Pension Consolidation can simplify your administration, help you keep track of performance, and make retirement planning easier.
Written by
Wealth of Advice
Published on
25 Nov 2025

So, it is no surprise that many people consider consolidating their pensions into one place. It can simplify your administration, help you keep track of performance, and make retirement planning easier.

However, consolidation is not always straightforward, and in some cases, it can lead to the loss of valuable benefits that you cannot replace.

This article, accompanying Episode 47 of the Retire Well with Wealth of Advice podcast, highlights the pension consolidation traps to be aware of and how to transfer safely.

Why People Consider Consolidating Their Pensions

Bringing multiple pensions together can offer several advantages:

  • Simpler administration
    • With one pension to manage, you avoid the complexity of multiple log-ins, statements, and income streams complicating taxation.
  • Better investment choice
    • Older workplace or legacy schemes may offer limited fund options. Modern platforms often provide greater choice.
  • Improved retirement flexibility
    • Not all pensions offer drawdown, partial withdrawals, or flexible retirement options.
  • Lower charges
    • Some older schemes charge more, and consolidating may allow you to benefit from lower fees at higher asset levels.
  • Clearer death benefits
    • Keeping pensions in one place can make estate planning and nominations easier.

Before consolidating, it is important to understand what you might lose by transferring.

Investment Choice: Compare on a Like-for-Like Basis

Many people consolidate to access a wider range of investments, but it is essential to make proper comparisons.

  • Can you already access similar funds?
    • Sometimes the funds you want are already available in your current scheme.
  • What does the new pension offer?
    • Check performance history, underlying costs, asset allocation options, and whether the investment range suits your risk profile.
  • Make fair comparisons
    • Ensure you compare like-for-like strategies, not a balanced fund against an entirely different approach.

Understanding Costs: More Than the Headline Fee

Charges can be more complex than they first appear.

  • Fund manager fees and transaction costs
    • A fund with a seemingly low annual charge may still have high transaction costs that affect net performance.
  • Lower costs with larger pots
    • Consolidation might move you into a lower charging tier if you hold more assets within your pension.
  • Exit fees or transfer penalties
    • Legacy schemes or older contracts may apply exit charges or market value reductions, particularly for with-profits or frozen policies.

Always review the total charge picture, not just a single figure.

Valuable Guarantees You Could Lose

This is where people often give up significant long-term value by transferring.

Guaranteed Annuity Rates (GARs)

Some older pensions offer Guaranteed Annuity Rates, often between 8% and 11%.

For example, a £100,000 pot with a Guaranteed Annuity Rate of 11% could provide around £11,000 a year, GAR but only about £6,000 at normal market rates of 6%.  

Losing this could cost more than £150,000 over a typical 30-year retirement.

Guaranteed Growth Rates

Section 32 buyout policies and certain with-profits pensions may offer guaranteed annual growth. It’s important to understand how valuable these are to you and expected market returns.

Many with-profits funds also apply terminal bonuses if the plan is held to maturity. A transfer may remove this entirely.

If you suspect your pension includes any of these guarantees, review it carefully before considering consolidation.

Protected Benefits: Tax-Free Cash and Pension Age

Older pensions can offer valuable non-financial protections that are lost on transfer.

Scheme-specific tax-free cash protection

Before 2006, some schemes allowed more than 25 per cent of the pot to be taken tax-free.

If you were to consolidate one of these pensions with another scheme it can easily be lost.

Protected pension age (for example, age 55)

If you were a member of a scheme before 2021, you may have a protected pension age of 55 rather than 57 (the new Minimum Pension Age from April 2028).

Losing a protected pension age may affect redundancy planning, early retirement, or your cashflow strategy, particularly if you were planning to retire early.

MPAA Triggers: A Common Trap with Small Pots

Although not specific to consolidating a pension, if you consolidate a small pension and immediately withdraw from it, you could trigger the Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA). This reduces the annual pension contribution allowance from £60,000 to £10,000.

Using the small pots rules

Up to three personal pensions under £10,000 can be taken as lump sums without triggering the MPAA, keeping your options open for large pension contributions.

Pension Scams and Unauthorised Transfers

Pension scams remain a significant risk, particularly when people are consolidating.

Warning signs include:

  • Transfers to offshore schemes
  • Arrangements claiming to protect assets from care fees
  • Property-based or exotic investments
  • Pressure to act quickly
  • Promises of early access to pension funds
  • Offers that sound too good to be true

A legitimate transfer will never rely on loopholes or guarantee unrealistic returns.

Defined Benefit (DB) Schemes: Proceed with Caution

Transferring out of a DB scheme is something that often requires formal advice and should not be a decision that is made lightly.

The £30,000 rule

If the transfer value is £30,000 or more, regulated financial advice is legally required.

DB pensions provide guaranteed, often inflation-linked income, which is difficult to match elsewhere.

DB-to-DB transfers

Sometimes seen in public-sector transfer clubs such as the LGPS, but even then, accrual rates and scheme rules can differ significantly.

Always request comparisons and illustrations before making a decision.

Final Thoughts

Pension consolidation can be an excellent way to streamline your finances, reduce charges, and access more flexible retirement options. However, it is crucial to understand what you may be giving up before you transfer.

A thorough review will highlight the benefits, costs, guarantees, risks, and whether consolidation genuinely leaves you in a better financial position.

Need Help Reviewing or Consolidating Your Pensions?

If you want to understand whether consolidation is right for you, or you are unsure what features your existing pensions hold, Wealth of Advice can help.

We can review your pensions in detail, explain your options clearly, and guide you through a safe and informed decision.

Please feel free to contact us to discuss your pensions and retirement plan.

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