This calculator will help highlight how close to your
target you are with regard to establishing a decent pension.
It will only provide a very general picture and we strongly
recommend that we conduct a proper audit of your position
in which we will assess all of your current arrangements
and make suitable recommendations. That said if you enter
all the information correctly and it suggests that you
need to save £300pm, and you are only saving £50 then
it is fair to say that some additional planning will be
needed.
Compliance note - We believe that it is compliant, and
it has been passed as compliant by more than one network.
Explanatory Notes
Accrual
Rate - The rate at which you accumulate pension
for each year of service. You need to know this. Guessing
is very risky as it may lead to an over optimistic
assessment of your pension position. That said most
good schemes provide one sixtieth of salary for each
year of service, (hence the oft quoted pension being
40/60, ie two thirds of salary for 40 years service
with the same employer)
Expected
Years Service by Retirement - This refers to any
time that you have spent or will spend in a good company
defined benefits scheme (one that pays you a pension
according to the number of years service, rather than
according to the size of any fund that you may accumulate).
Most large employer schemes are of this type.
If you have been in such a scheme for ten years,
and expect to stay until retirement in twenty more,
then enter 30.
If you have spent five years with such an employer
and then left, enter five. However note that this
calculator assumes that your current salary is the
relevant one, whereas in fact presumably your scheme
salary was lower. In this case the calculator will
OVERESTIMATE your pension.
If you have benefits from such a scheme and want
to see how they affect you then run the calculator
using the term, the salary value that you had when
you left the scheme, and the term to retirement
that applied when you left the scheme. This will
be more accurate, but still not to be relied upon.
Value
of Current Investments - The current value of all
of your long term savings, be they pension funds, shares,
deposits etc. EG if £12,000 in pensions, £3,500 in
ISAs/PEPs and £12,000 in deposits/shares etc enter
27500.
Savings
Rate - How much each year you are setting aside
for long term investment, either explicitly to pensions,
or implicity in general savings. If your arrangements
seem to be falling short of your desired pension you
need to adjust this figure to see how much you need
to invest to meet your target. Include any employer
pension contributions if known.
Inflation
and Growth Assumptions - Choose your own, but note
that the highest growth rate allowed in formal projections
is 9% (for which inflation is assumed to be 4.5%) and
the cautious one is 5% (with inflation of 0.5%). As
well as the absolute levels of each, it is important
to understand that over the long term there cannot
be a huge difference between growth and inflation,
and differentials of over 4.5% will lead to over optimistic
pension projections.
Because of the way that the math operates there
is an added complexity when considering the effect
of Inflation on Regular Savings. In short if you
invest £1000 a year then , because of inflation,
it appears that each year you invest less and less
in real terms. If you want to se what happens if
you invest the same amount in real terms then set
the Inflation at 1, and use a conservative growth
rate.
Enter in the form 1.06 for 6%.
In the internal math the growth rate is reduced
by 1% to represent fund charges, as per Stakeholder.
Your actual pension costs may be different.
Annuity
Rate - Choose your own assumption, but if you want
to be cautious then 6-7% is a good guide. Enter as
a decimal, eg 0.07.
Desired
Pension - The annual pension you would like if
you were to retire today.
Projected
Pension Fund - The value of the fund at retirement.
Projected
Pension - The pension that the fund will provide
for your selected annuity rate.
Fund
Value in Real Terms - The value of the fund in
todays money.
Pension
Value in Real Terms - This is the number that counts.
The value in todays terms of your pensions, both from
any fund, and from any employers scheme. State Pensions
are ignored.