Can you retire at 65?
Retiring at 65 means 2 years without state pension. Your pot must fund your entirelifestyle until 67 — then the state pension supplements it. Here's what that costs.
| Start saving at | Getting by | Living well | Enjoying life |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age 25 (40yr) | £69/mo | £365/mo | £571/mo |
| Age 30 (35yr) | £90/mo | £476/mo | £745/mo |
| Age 35 (30yr) | £120/mo | £632/mo | £990/mo |
| Age 40 (25yr) | £163/mo | £861/mo | £1,348/mo |
| Age 45 (20yr) | £230/mo | £1,216/mo | £1,904/mo |
| Age 50 (15yr) | £346/mo | £1,826/mo | £2,860/mo |
These targets assume starting from zero. Your situation is different. Check your personalised retirement readiness score.
- You're 25 and want to retire at 65? The average 25-year-old has £4,500→
- You're 30 and want to retire at 65? The average 30-year-old has £13,000→
- You're 35 and want to retire at 65? The average 35-year-old has £29,000→
- You're 40 and want to retire at 65? The average 40-year-old has £50,000→
- Is £500,000enough to retire? →
- Compare: retiring at state pension age (67) →
Retiring at 65 puts you just 2 years short of state pension age. The gap is small, and bridging it with modest drawdown from your pension is straightforward for most savers.
At this point, the decision often comes down to quality of life rather than pure maths. If you can afford it and your health and motivation are telling you it's time, the financial difference between retiring at 65 and waiting until 67 is usually small — a few thousand pounds of extra contributions and one fewer year of drawdown.
If you have a defined benefit scheme from a previous employer, check whether it has a normal retirement age of 65 or 65. Some older DB schemes let you take unreduced benefits before state pension age, which can make early retirement significantly more affordable.
- •Target pots use the PLSA Retirement Living Standards (2024/25 single-person figures). Your actual needs depend on housing costs, health, location, and lifestyle preferences.
- •The state pension gap calculation assumes zero state pension before age 67. If you have a deferred state pension or other guaranteed income, your required pot may be lower.
- •Monthly contribution estimates assume 5% nominal growth, 0.75% annual fees, and starting from £0. If you already have a pot, you need less.
- •Figures are in nominal terms and do not account for inflation. The real cost of retirement will be higher in future pounds.
- •The minimum pension access age is 55, rising to 57 from April 2028. You cannot access a defined contribution pension before this age without exceptional circumstances.
- •This is general information, not personal financial advice. For personalised guidance speak to an FCA-regulated financial adviser.
This calculator provides estimates based on 2025/26 tax rates and is not financial advice. Scottish taxpayers are subject to different income tax rates and bands. The calculations assume your salary is your only source of income and do not account for benefits in kind or other taxable income.
For personalised guidance on your pension contributions, speak to an FCA-regulated financial adviser. You can find one via Unbiased or VouchedFor.