What is the Normal Minimum Pension Age, and what is changing?
The Normal Minimum Pension Age (NMPA) is the earliest age at which most people can access benefits from a registered private or workplace pension. It is set by HMRC and applies to the vast majority of defined contribution (DC) pension schemes, including personal pensions, SIPPs, and most workplace pensions.
Currently set at 55, the NMPA will rise to 57 on 6 April 2028. The change was legislated under the Finance Act 2022 and has been confirmed by HMRC. It is not subject to further consultation - the date and the new age are settled.
For most people, this means that if you were planning to access your pension at 55 or 56 after April 2028, you will no longer be able to do so without penalty. You will need to wait until you reach 57.
Who is affected?
The simplest way to understand whether you are affected is by date of birth:
Born before 6 April 1971
You will turn 57 before the new rules take effect on 6 April 2028. You can access your pension under the current rules from age 55 - provided you do so before April 2028. If you have already turned 55, you are currently eligible. If you are approaching 55 in the next couple of years, you may still be able to access your pension under the current rules before the deadline - but timing matters and the window is closing.
Born between 6 April 1971 and 5 April 1973
This is the group most directly affected. You will be 55 or 56 on 6 April 2028 - old enough to access your pension under the current rules, but not yet 57 under the new ones. Unless you have accessed your pension before the change takes effect, or your scheme has a protected pension age, you will need to wait until your 57th birthday.
Born on or after 6 April 1973
The new rules will apply to you throughout your working life. You will not be able to access your pension before age 57. Planning should simply account for this from the outset.
What about protected pension ages?
Some pension schemes - particularly those for the police, fire service, armed forces, and certain other specific professions - include a protected pension age that predates the current rules. These protections were written into the scheme rules prior to 2006 and are generally preserved under the new legislation.
If your scheme has a protected pension age of 50 or 55, and you are a member of that scheme, you may be able to access benefits at the lower age even after April 2028. The position on transfers is more nuanced than often assumed: HMRC guidance (PTM062250) confirms that protection can be retained on qualifying block transfers and certain individual transfers, provided the conditions for a qualifying transfer are met. However, protection applying only to the transferred assets - not to new contributions made to the receiving scheme. Whether a transfer preserves a protected age depends on the specific terms of both schemes and the type of transfer. Taking independent advice before making any transfer is strongly recommended.
The rules around protected ages are scheme-specific and genuinely complex. If you believe your pension may have a protected age, take independent advice before making any transfers or decisions about access - the consequences of getting this wrong are permanent.
Can you access your pension before 2028 if you are approaching 55?
Yes - but only if you actually access the pension before the new rules come into force. Simply reaching age 55 before April 2028 does not fix your access rights under the old rules. You need to have taken benefits from the pension (such as starting drawdown or taking a lump sum) before 6 April 2028 to be treated under the current framework.
This matters particularly for those turning 55 in 2025, 2026 or 2027. If you are considering early retirement and this window is relevant to you, the time to plan is now - not in 2027.
Important - the MPAA trap: If you access your pension before April 2028 in order to beat the deadline, and you take taxable income (not just tax-free cash), you will trigger the Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA), which drops your future pension contribution limit to just £10,000 per year. If you might return to work or wish to continue saving into a pension, this is a serious and irreversible constraint. Crystallising benefits purely to preserve access rights needs careful thought.
What if your retirement plan assumed pension access at 55?
For most people, a two-year delay to pension access is manageable with some planning - but only if that planning happens in advance. The question is what income or capital you would use to bridge the gap between your planned retirement date and the new minimum access age of 57.
Depending on your situation, this might involve:
- ISA and cash reserves: If you have meaningful savings outside your pension, these can fund a bridge period. Depending on the size of your pension and your intended withdrawal rate, bridging two years from non-pension assets may be entirely feasible without disrupting your long-term plan.
- Part-time or phased retirement: Many people in their mid-50s prefer to reduce hours rather than stop entirely. Combining a reduced earned income with non-pension assets can extend the bridge without touching the pension at all.
- Defined benefit (final salary) pensions: If you have a DB pension from a previous employer, its access rules may differ from your DC pensions. Some DB schemes allow access from 55 (or even 50 under protected rules). Understanding which pots you can access and when is an important part of planning.
- Delaying retirement slightly: For those whose retirement plan was primarily driven by pension access rather than a hard stop date, shifting from 55 to 57 may mean continuing to work (or part-work) for two additional years. While not ideal, this can also materially improve the long-term position: more contributions, more investment growth, a shorter drawdown period.
- Accessing some pension now if the window is still open: For those who are 55 now and were planning early retirement, it may make sense to begin accessing the pension - particularly the tax-free cash - before April 2028, while preserving the flexibility of the drawdown fund. This is a decision with significant implications and should not be taken without advice.
What about the State Pension?
The State Pension age is currently 66 for both men and women, and is scheduled to rise to 67 between 2026 and 2028, and further to 68 on a timeline that remains subject to government review. The State Pension is entirely separate from the NMPA - it is not affected by the April 2028 change to private pension access ages.
However, for people planning early retirement, the gap between the planned private pension access date and State Pension age is a central feature of the cashflow plan. With the NMPA rising to 57 and the State Pension not receivable until 66 or 67, many people will face a 9-10 year period entirely reliant on private savings. How those savings are structured and drawn matters considerably.
Frequently asked questions
Technically, yes - you can stop working at any age. But if your pension is the primary source of income for that retirement, and the new NMPA rules apply to you, you will not be able to draw from your pension until age 57 (after April 2028). Retiring at 55 would require sufficient non-pension assets to fund the gap - typically two years of living costs plus a buffer. For some people that is achievable; for others it requires re-examining the plan entirely.
The NMPA change applies broadly to registered pension schemes, including most defined benefit schemes. However, many DB schemes have their own normal retirement age (often 60 or 65), and some have protected lower ages for certain occupations. The position for DB pensions is scheme-specific. If you have a DB pension, the scheme trustees or your HR department can clarify the access rules that apply to your membership.
There is a separate provision for ill-health early retirement. If you are suffering from a serious or terminal illness, pension benefits may be accessible before the NMPA - this is not affected by the 2028 change. The conditions that qualify are defined by HMRC and assessed by the pension provider. This is a specific and nuanced area; independent advice and medical evidence are typically required.
Outside of ill-health or a valid protected pension age, accessing pension benefits before the NMPA results in an unauthorised payment charge - a significant HMRC tax penalty of up to 55% of the amount taken. Schemes and advisers promoting access below NMPA should be treated with extreme caution. Many such arrangements are pension liberation scams. If you are approached with a scheme claiming to offer early access, this is a serious red flag.
The change is legislated and confirmed for 6 April 2028. Any future government could in principle amend this, but there is no indication that a reversal is planned or under consideration. Pension planning should be based on current confirmed legislation, and the advice is consistent: plan for 57 as the minimum access age unless you qualify under a protected provision or the ill-health exception.
Why this matters more than most people realise
Two years might not sound significant in the context of a multi-decade retirement. But the NMPA change is not just a minor administrative delay - it has material consequences for people whose retirement timeline was built around pension access at 55.
For people in this position, the issue is the income gap: what do you live on in the period between stopping work and being able to access your pension? If the answer was going to be "my pension", that answer has now changed for those affected by the 2028 rule.
Getting ahead of this - with a proper cashflow plan, a clear view of what you can access and when, and a strategy for bridging the gap if one exists - is the difference between a smooth early retirement and a plan that runs into trouble precisely when you expected to stop worrying.