Wealth of Advice, Swale House, Mandale Business Park, Durham, DH1 1TH
Divorce is one of the most significant financial turning points you’ll experience in life.
Property, children, and day to day finances are usually front of mind — but pensions are often overlooked, despite being one of the largest assets many couples own.
In this guide, we explain how pensions are treated on divorce, the options available, and why getting advice early can make a substantial difference to your long term financial security.
For many couples, pensions are second only to the family home in value. Yet statistics consistently show they are often ignored:
This usually isn’t deliberate — it’s because pensions are complex, future focused, and hard to value. Unfortunately, the decisions you make during divorce can impact your retirement lifestyle for decades.
Under UK law, pensions can be treated in three main ways during divorce proceedings:
Pension earmarking means a portion of one spouse’s pension is “earmarked” to pay income to the other spouse when the pension holder retires.
Key drawbacks:
Because of these risks, earmarking is now very uncommon and generally avoided.
Offsetting involves balancing pension value against other assets — for example:
This can be appealing because it avoids pension transfers, but it comes with risks.
The biggest issue? Valuation.
A pension doesn’t behave like cash or property:
Without proper advice, offsetting can lead to unequal long term outcomes, especially where one partner has a generous final salary (defined benefit) pension.
A pension sharing order is now the most common and often fairest approach.
It works by:
You then control:
This option usually requires financial advice to ensure the transferred pension is set up correctly.
Not all pensions are created equal.
Defined Benefit (Final Salary) Pensions
Defined Contribution Pensions
A major mistake during divorce is treating all pension values as equal. In many cases, it can make sense to retain guaranteed pensions and offset or share more flexible ones — but this must be assessed carefully.
Defined benefit pensions are often valued using a Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV).
While this provides a monetary figure, it:
Comparing CETVs to savings or property values without expert input can create unfair settlements.
A Pensions on Divorce (POD) report provides an independent assessment of pension values and suitable settlement options.
Pros:
Cons:
Even if you don’t use a formal report, understanding pension values properly is essential.
Review Your Will
Divorce alters how your will operates. Without updates, assets may pass in unintended ways.
Update Pension Death Benefit Nominations
Pensions sit outside your will. Old nominations may still point to an ex spouse unless updated.
Watch Out for the Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA)
Taking taxable pension income — even a small amount — can reduce future pension contribution limits from £60,000 to £10,000. Decisions made under short term pressure can restrict long term options.
These issues don’t usually show up immediately — they appear later, often at retirement.
We often help clients:
Divorce often marks a new financial chapter. Professional advice can help ensure it starts on solid foundations.
Pensions may not feel urgent during divorce — but they are too important to ignore.
The right decisions can protect your future independence and retirement security. The wrong ones may be impossible to undo.
If you’re going through divorce or already have a pension sharing order in place, a clear, expert financial sense check can provide reassurance — and prevent costly mistakes later.
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.

