Here’s a short summary of the most significant pension-related measures announced on 26 November 2025 as part of the government’s Autumn Budget.
Salary Sacrifice is an agreement between an employee and an employer. The employee agrees to waive part of their gross salary by a set amount in exchange for the employer paying a pension contribution of an equivalent amount into their pension arrangement. This usually replaces the regular member contributions, which the employee would otherwise pay.
The advantage of Salary Sacrifice is that, because the waived or sacrificed amount is taken before tax and National Insurance (NI):
However, from 6 April 2029 the NI exemption on salary-sacrificed pension contributions will now be capped at £2,000 per year.
Contributions above this £2,000 per year threshold will then incur employee and employer NI, reducing the advantage of employees sacrificing higher amounts to improve their pension savings.
Higher earners sacrificing a higher level of their salary to their pension arrangements are likely to be impacted the most by this change.
Employers are likely to face increased costs and may wish to review future employee reward strategies. They will also be required to report salary sacrificed amounts via payroll systems.
In the Autumn Budget 2024 the government announced that from 6 April 2027, most unused pension funds and death benefit lump sums would be included within the value of an individual’s estate for Inheritance Tax purposes. It was proposed that Scheme Administrators would become liable for reporting and paying any tax due (40%) on the part of an individual’s estate that is above the £325,000 threshold. They would also be required to liaise with the deceased individual’s Personal Representative(s) in relation to the value of the estate and the calculation and payment of any Inheritance Tax due.
However, following a formal consultation, the government has confirmed in the Autumn Budget 2025 that its proposals are amended as follows:
Defined Benefit dependant pensions (spouse, civil partners or children’s benefits) are excluded from Inheritance Tax. Defined Contribution schemes, joint life annuities and regular annuity payments to a dependant are also exempt.
To date, DB pension schemes in surplus have been able to return funds to employers, but paying surplus directly to members has been heavily restricted and subject to punitive tax charges. Often the only way of being able to use a scheme surplus to benefit members was for members to receive additional amounts of pension or higher pension increases.
Legislation will now be included in the Finance Bill 2026/2027 and effective from 6 April 2027, in order that:
Well-funded DB schemes will be allowed to make direct payments of surplus assets to members or other beneficiaries, as a one-off lump sum payment, provided:
These payments will:
Schemes must:
The government has announced plans to legislate for inflation increases (indexation) on pre-1997 pensions for members of the PPF and FAS.
Currently the PPF and FAS do not provide inflation increases on pre-1997 benefits, which has meant the real value of members’ benefits has been eroded over time, and this has been a long-standing concern for many in the pensions industry.
This will mean that from January 2027, members of the PPF and FAS will receive annual Consumer Prices Index (CPI) linked increases. This increases will be capped at 2.5% on pre-1997 compensation or assistance payments, provided their original pension schemes included this level of indexation. It is not yet clear what will happen if the original pension scheme did provide increases on pre-1997 pensions, but at a different rate.
The markets’ reaction to the budget was very subdued, but marginally positive, with Sterling rising slightly and government bond yields falling slightly on the day. Notably, the stocks of sectors that feared tax hikes but were spared, e.g. gambling related stocks, performed well on the news. The market reaction largely persisted in the days following the budget.
As such, despite the scale of tax rises announced, markets apparently accepted the fiscal package without major alarm – for now. Should inflation resurge, or global conditions deteriorate, the ‘fiscal headroom’ may evaporate, testing investor patience further.
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