Pension Drawdown: Flexible Access to Your Retirement Income

Since 2015, flexible access rules mean you can take tax-free cash and draw income in varying amounts, giving retirees far more control.
Written by
Wealth of Advice
Published on
04 Mar 2025

Pension drawdown has become a central feature of retirement planning since 2015, offering flexibility and control over how you access your defined contribution (DC) pension. In Episode 9 of the Retire Well with Wealth of Advice podcast, Chartered Financial Planners Joe and Matthew explain how drawdown works, who it is suitable for, and key considerations to make it sustainable.

What is Pension Drawdown?

Pension drawdown allows you to remain invested while taking income from your DC pension. Unlike purchasing an annuity, which provides a guaranteed income, drawdown lets you manage withdrawals and investment growth over time.

Since 2015, flexible access rules mean you can take tax-free cash and draw income in varying amounts, giving retirees far more control over their retirement finances.

How Does Pension Drawdown Work?

There are different ways to take income from a DC pension:

UFPLS (Uncrystallised Funds Pension Lump Sum): Take a lump sum directly from your pension, with 25% tax-free and the remainder taxed as income.

Flexi-Access Drawdown (FAD): Move funds into a drawdown account, allowing withdrawals over time while the remainder stays invested.

Drawdown allows you to adjust withdrawals according to your income needs, lifestyle goals, and market conditions.

Pros and Cons of Pension Drawdown

Pros

Flexibility: Withdraw amounts when you need them.

• Growth potential: Pension investments can continue to grow.

Inheritance benefits: Remaining pension funds can pass to beneficiaries.

Cons

Investment risk: Your pot is exposed to market fluctuations.

Longevity risk: Withdrawals may exceed sustainable levels, depleting your pension too early.

Sequencing risk: Poor returns early in retirement can have long-term impact.

How Much Can I Withdraw?

Drawdown gives you flexibility, but careful planning is crucial:

• Adjust withdrawals over time to match spending needs and market performance.

• Sustainable withdrawal strategies include the 4% rule or bucket approaches, balancing short-term needs with long-term growth.

• Phased withdrawals vs lump sums: spreading withdrawals can reduce tax impact and manage market risk.

Diversification across assets is essential to reduce volatility and protect income streams.

Who Should Consider Drawdown?

Drawdown is suitable for retirees who:

• Have other guaranteed income sources (e.g., State Pension or DB pension).

• Want to leave a legacy for family or beneficiaries.

• Are comfortable with investment risk and market fluctuations.

Common Drawdown Mistakes

• Withdrawing too much too soon: Reduces long-term sustainability.

• Neglecting investment performance: Can lead to pot depletion.

• Underestimating tax implications: Withdrawals above tax-free amounts are subject to income tax.

Final Thoughts

Pension drawdown offers flexibility, growth potential, and inheritance benefits, but it also comes with investment and longevity risks. Understanding your withdrawal strategy, maintaining diversification, and planning tax-efficient withdrawals are key to making drawdown sustainable.

Wealth of Advice can help you assess your drawdown strategy, model sustainable withdrawals, and ensure your pension supports your retirement goals. Explore our free guides, calculators, and blog posts to take control of your retirement income today.

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