Wealth of Advice, Swale House, Mandale Business Park, Durham, DH1 1TH
In this latest Retire Well discussion, Matthew and Joe tackle some of the most frequent questions they receive from clients and podcast listeners. Covering everything from the upcoming rise in pension access age to the complexities of divorce and defined benefit schemes, this Q&A‑style roundup offers practical guidance for anyone preparing for retirement.
Below, we’ve brought together the key questions and the insights Matthew and Joe shared.
With the minimum pension access age rising from 55 to 57, many people are uncertain about how the change affects them.
The key factor is whether your pension scheme gives you a protected pension age of 55.
If your scheme includes this protection, you can continue accessing that pension from age 55—even after the rules change.
If you don’t have a protected age, you may still have a brief window between the date you turn 55 and the April change to crystallise benefits. But once the new rules take effect, untouched pensions without protection will generally become accessible only from 57.
Matthew also cautions against accessing a pension simply because you can:
This question often comes from people trying to make their pensions feel more organised.
Matthew suggests checking whether any pot has special features:
If none of these apply, then consolidating pensions can simplify drawdown and often reduce fees.
Consolidation benefits:
However, Joe notes one exception:
If you have a very small pot (<£10,000), withdrawing it under the small pots rule won’t trigger the Money Purchase Annual Allowance. In that case, you may want to use that pot first, especially if you're still contributing to pensions.
The real issue behind this question is often inconsistent investment performance between pots.
Differences in risk levels (not luck) tend to explain why one pot grows faster than another. Consolidation helps bring all pensions into one coherent investment plan.
A bridging pension pays you a higher income until you reach State Pension age, then reduces by roughly the amount of State Pension you receive.
This option can be extremely useful for people retiring early, especially at 60.
Advantages:
Not ideal for:
Joe also highlights that early retirement factors in DB schemes are often misunderstood. They’re not “penalties” - they simply reflect the fact that taking benefits earlier means being paid for longer. When used well, early access can better align income with lifestyle.
Consumers often worry about the security of guaranteed income.
If an annuity provider fails:
If a defined benefit scheme fails:
Inflation increases and spouse benefits may change, but core income is safeguarded.
This is an area Matthew and Joe discuss frequently because it’s one of the most powerful and underused estate‑planning tools.
You can make regular gifts from income that is genuinely surplus to your living needs, and they fall immediately outside your estate for inheritance tax purposes.
Key rules:
Income includes:
Income does not include:
As Joe emphasises, this exemption is claimed after death, so good record‑keeping is essential. Keeping annual notes or using HMRC’s own form as a template makes it far easier for executors.
Upcoming changes mean that pensions will be included in your estate for inheritance tax (from 2027).
This has caused confusion.
These rules stay in place.
From 2027, pensions will be included in the deceased’s estate for inheritance tax purposes.
This could create new IHT liabilities for some households.
Both Matthew and Joe say no - life decisions shouldn’t be driven by tax alone.
Use tax rules to optimise your choices, not dictate them.
Instead, planning conversations about:
…can go much further than making lifestyle sacrifices for tax.
Yes. Pensions are normally considered marital assets regardless of when contributions stopped.
Options during divorce include:
A Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV) may undervalue a DB pension relative to its true lifetime benefit.
Specialist advice is important to ensure fairness.
Matthew also highlights the emotional and financial upheaval caused by divorce—and how many people benefit from having a planner help them rebuild a structured financial life.
This round of Q&A highlights just how complex retirement planning can be. From understanding shifting pension ages to making sense of DB scheme options, inheritance tax changes, and divorce settlements, many people find that what initially looks like a simple decision has deeper implications.
Matthew and Joe’s consistent message remains clear:
Your retirement choices should be guided by your goals and lifestyle—not fear, not rules, and not guesswork.
When in doubt, getting professional advice can save you from costly mistakes.
If you have more questions or want your topic included in the next Q&A episode, feel free to get in touch anytime by emailing retirewell@wealthofadvice.co.uk.
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.

