LGPS - When is the best time to take my pension?

I'm 53 and was made redundant from a local government job 3 years ago. I have a job with the NHS at the moment and am just considering the best time to start drawing my local government pension? I was in the old, old scheme from 1988, then the old scheme from 2008, then the newest scheme from 2014 to 2018.

I have used a pension calculator from the Civica website and looked at taking my pension at 55, 60, 65, 67 and 69. I also have a spreadsheet showing all options on the assumption I might live to 75, 80, 85 and 90. In pretty much every scenario the sweet spot seems to be to take the pension at 60, as even living till I am 90, none of the other options catch up in terms of cold hard cash I will receive, even taking 20% tax into account. It also seems in each case that there is no point accepting an enhanced lump sum in return for a reduced pension.

I still have a couple of years to decide what I want to do. Has anyone else found that 60 is definitely the right time and do you have any advice to help an old codger make up his mind?
«13

Comments

  • Silvertabby
    Silvertabby Posts: 9,950 Forumite
    Eighth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 24 June 2021 at 6:19PM
    I'm 53 and was made redundant from a local government job 3 years ago. I have a job with the NHS at the moment and am just considering the best time to start drawing my local government pension? I was in the old, old scheme from 1988, then the old scheme from 2008, then the newest scheme from 2014 to 2018.

    I have used a pension calculator from the Civica website and looked at taking my pension at 55, 60, 65, 67 and 69. I also have a spreadsheet showing all options on the assumption I might live to 75, 80, 85 and 90. In pretty much every scenario the sweet spot seems to be to take the pension at 60, as even living till I am 90, none of the other options catch up in terms of cold hard cash I will receive, even taking 20% tax into account. It also seems in each case that there is no point accepting an enhanced lump sum in return for a reduced pension.

    I still have a couple of years to decide what I want to do. Has anyone else found that 60 is definitely the right time and do you have any advice to help an old codger make up his mind?

    Everyone is different, but in your case you will meet R85 in respect of your pre 2008 service at 60.  That's 20 years of unreduced pension.  Yes, your 2008 to 2014 service will be reduced for early payment before 65, and your post 2014 service will be reduced for payment before SPA - but taking your pension at 60 is certainly worth considering.
  • Thanks Silvertabby. I think I always thought of a works pension as something that had to run its full term to age 65 or 67 and can't believe that the best solution by a mile is to take it at 60 with a few reductions here and there. Worked out that if I live till I'm 80, taking my pension at 60 means I will be 50k+ better off than waiting till 65. Just seems a bit strange which is why I thought I'd ask the experts on here if I have got it right??
  • saucer
    saucer Posts: 495 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Name Dropper
    edited 24 June 2021 at 5:59PM
    Thanks Silvertabby. I think I always thought of a works pension as something that had to run its full term to age 65 or 67 
    60 was the retirement age before 2008 and as Silvertabby has said that part of your pension will be protected because of the combination of your age and years of membership under the 85 year rule https://www.lgpsmember.org/more/eightyfive.php
  • Thanks saucer. Think I'm just trying to confirm that I have got my calculations right and that I am doing the right thing? Common sense to me says that the longer you defer your pension, the more you are going to get, however from what research I have done, this is not the case. By my calculations, if I leave at 60, I will get a shed load of cash. If I leave at most other ages I will need to live to 100 to get the same amount.
    Has anyone been through the process that can confirm this?
  • hyubh
    hyubh Posts: 3,709 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    edited 24 June 2021 at 8:15PM
    Thanks saucer. Think I'm just trying to confirm that I have got my calculations right and that I am doing the right thing? Common sense to me says that the longer you defer your pension, the more you are going to get, however from what research I have done, this is not the case. By my calculations, if I leave at 60, I will get a shed load of cash. If I leave at most other ages I will need to live to 100 to get the same amount.
    Has anyone been through the process that can confirm this?
    Normal retirement age in the final scheme was (is) 65. What meeting the 85 year rule meant (and means) was being able to retire earlier without an actuarial reduction. So in your case, if you left it to your CARE scheme normal pension age of SPA, you would only receive an actuarial increase on your pre-08 pension from age 65 to retirement, not age 60 to retirement.
  • daveyjp
    daveyjp Posts: 13,351 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    Thats how it is supposed to work.  You get less if you retire early as you will probably receive it for more years.

    However its not about trying to 'get back' or breaking even etc, its about retiring at the point the income you receive is enough for you to live the life you would like in retirement.

    I have friends who were happy to take LGPS at late 50s as they had other retirement income.  A family friend has just had his 68 birthday and next year will have 50 years LGPS service, he doesn't even talk of retirement.

    So bottom line is do what works for you!
  • saucer
    saucer Posts: 495 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Name Dropper
    hyubh said:
    Thanks saucer. Think I'm just trying to confirm that I have got my calculations right and that I am doing the right thing? Common sense to me says that the longer you defer your pension, the more you are going to get, however from what research I have done, this is not the case. By my calculations, if I leave at 60, I will get a shed load of cash. If I leave at most other ages I will need to live to 100 to get the same amount.
    Has anyone been through the process that can confirm this?
    Normal retirement age in the final scheme was (is) 65. What meeting the 85 year rule meant (and means) was being able to retire earlier without an actuarial reduction. So in your case, if you left it to your CARE scheme normal pension age of SPA, you would only receive an actuarial increase on your pre-08 pension from age 65 to retirement, not age 60 to retirement.
    Thank you and apologies if I confused matters.  I stand corrected on the normal retirement age.  My intention was to highlight the relevance and importance of R85 on reaching 60
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 349.9K Banking & Borrowing
  • 252.6K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 453K Spending & Discounts
  • 242.8K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 619.6K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 176.4K Life & Family
  • 255.8K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
  • 15.1K Coronavirus Support Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.