UK Pension Annual Allowance Taper Calculator 2026/27
Calculate your 2026/27 UK pension annual allowance after tapering. Standard £60,000 allowance, tapered when adjusted income >£260K (min £10K). NHS pension scenarios and carry-forward analysis.
Annual Allowance Taper Calculation (2026/27)
UK Pension Annual Allowance Taper 2026/27 — Full Guide
The pension annual allowance taper was introduced to limit pension tax relief for high earners. Since 2023/24, the thresholds have been at their current levels: £200,000 threshold income and £260,000 adjusted income, with a minimum tapered AA of £10,000. The standard AA of £60,000 is well above the old £40,000 limit.
Taper Calculation Formula
If Threshold Income ≤ £200,000: Standard AA = £60,000 (NO taper)
If Threshold Income > £200,000:
Adjusted Income = Threshold Income + Employer Pension Contributions
If Adjusted Income ≤ £260,000: Standard AA = £60,000 (NO taper)
If Adjusted Income > £260,000:
Tapered AA = £60,000 − (Adjusted Income − £260,000) ÷ 2
Minimum Tapered AA = £10,000
AA Charge = max(0, Total Pension Input − Tapered AA) × Marginal Tax Rate
Example — £220K income, £30K employer + £10K employee pension
Adjusted income: £210,000 + £30,000 = £240,000 (≤£260K, so NO taper)
Annual allowance: £60,000
Total pension input: £30,000 + £10,000 = £40,000
Excess: £0 | AA charge: £0
NHS Pension Scenarios + Carry Forward & Contribution Strategies
Special NHS pension scenarios plus how to use carry forward unused allowance and optimal contributions to stay below threshold income
NHS pension annual allowance scenarios are complex due to defined benefit calculation rules. Below are example scenarios, plus a carry-forward calculator and strategies to reduce threshold income.
Carry Forward Calculator (3 Prior Years)
NHS Pension Scenarios — Illustrative Annual Allowance Charges
| NHS Role | Approx. Salary | Pension Input (est.) | Adjusted Income | Tapered AA | Approx. AA Charge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FY2/SHO | £35,000 | £4,500 | ~£45,000 | £60,000 | £0 |
| Registrar | £55,000 | £7,500 | ~£68,000 | £60,000 | £0 |
| Consultant (early career) | £110,000 | £25,000 | ~£140,000 | £60,000 | £0 |
| Consultant (late career) | £160,000 | £60,000 | ~£225,000 | £60,000 | £0 (under AA) |
| Consultant + bonus | £220,000 | £70,000 | ~£295,000 | £42,500 | ~£12,250 at 45% |
| Medical Director | £280,000 | £80,000 | ~£370,000 | £15,000 | ~£29,250 at 45% |
Strategies to Stay Below £200K Threshold Income
| Strategy | Max Saving | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Salary sacrifice pension (reduces threshold income) | Variable | Also reduces NI contributions for both employee and employer |
| Gift Aid charitable donations | Variable | Extends basic rate band; reduces net income for threshold purposes |
| Venture Capital Trust (VCT) subscription | 30% credit on up to £200K | VCT income is tax-free but does not reduce threshold income directly |
| Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) | 30% credit on up to £1M | SEIS 50% credit on up to £200K. EIS does not reduce threshold income |
| Defer bonus to next tax year | Threshold income drop | Requires employer cooperation; only available for some employees |