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As we wrap up the final Retire Well with Wealth of Advice episode of 2025, Matthew and Joe took the opportunity to answer some of the most common (and thoughtful) questions we’ve received over the year.
Unsurprisingly, many of them centre around pensions, tax efficiency, and how retirement works in practice rather than theory. Below, we’ve pulled together the key questions and answers in a clear Q&A format.
From a pure tax perspective, spreading withdrawals over multiple tax years can be marginally more efficient. However, the bigger issue is what happens next.
If you access a small pension via UFPLS or flexi-access drawdown, you’ll trigger the Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA), potentially limiting future pension contributions to £10,000 a year. The small pots rule avoids this.
So the key questions are:
For many people, the tax difference is minimal. What matters more is avoiding accidental restrictions and unnecessary complexity.
Don’t let the tax tail wag the investment dog.
From a sustainability of fund perspective, this could work. But you would at some point run out of lump sum allowance which causes a taxation issue.
UFPLS works on a fixed split:
But after 10 years you will hit lump sum allowance (£268,275). After that, all withdrawals become taxable.
More importantly, this question often reflects a deeper concern:
“I don’t want my pension pot to go down.”
Retirement planning isn’t about keeping the number static – it’s about funding your life. Markets don’t rise every year, and spending is the point of the pension.
With pensions becoming part of the IHT estate from 2027, “never touching the capital” is also becoming less effective as a strategy.
It depends heavily on the provider.
Some pensions show:
Others show:
Practical issues people often overlook:
This is where pensions that look cheap and well-invested can still fall down in retirement if the admin is clunky or inflexible.
Yes – While technically possible, running multiple pensions in retirement means:
It also complicates tax-free cash planning. You may run out in one pension while it still exists in another.
In most cases, consolidating into one flexible retirement pension simplifies income planning and can even reduce charges due to tiered pricing.
Defined benefit pensions are the obvious exception – these often sit alongside a single drawdown pot.
Not unless the pension has already been crystallised.
For every £3 of taxable income, £1 of tax-free cash must be released. You can’t access taxable income in isolation from an untouched pension.
Where this can work well is if you:
Only if you have sufficient UK relevant earnings.
If you’re retired and don’t:
Other options to consider:
For defined contribution pensions:
Defined benefit pensions are different – income paid to beneficiaries is usually taxable regardless of age at death.
From April 2027, pensions will also form part of the IHT estate, but the income tax rules above will still apply after any IHT is settled.
Tax alone is the wrong driver.
Better questions are:
In many cases:
Again: don’t let tax drive life decisions in isolation.
This episode – and these questions – highlight a recurring theme:
Retirement planning is as much behavioural and practical as it is technical.
Understanding how pensions work in theory is one thing. Making them work smoothly in real life is another.
If you’d like help making sense of your own situation, or you’d like us to cover a specific scenario in a future Q&A episode, you’re always welcome to get in touch.
If you want a better view of what your future could be, we'll have a chat and work out if we make a good fit for you and your financial picture.

