How Can I Tell Which of My Old Pensions Might Be Worth Transferring?

After a long career where I’ve moved around a lot, I’ve stacked up quite a few different pensions. How can I find out what they might be worth and which ones I should transfer without racking up major fees? 

Question asked by Roger Lay
30/09/2019

Understanding Multiple Pension Pots…

Today a lot of people have built up a number of pension funds with several different employers.

If you have a number of different pension arrangements, the best way to get the process started is to contact each of your schemes to work out what they might be worth.

Each will provide a written response. In the case of a defined benefit arrangement this is called a cash equivalent transfer value (or CETV) and will be guaranteed for 3 months. By contrast, defined contribution transfer values aren’t usually guaranteed but are much simpler to understand, being simply a sum total of everything you’ve invested, plus any investment growth and less potential exit fees, since opening the pension.

Once you have a set of up-to-date valuations on each of your pension arrangements, you’ll need to sit down and work out whether you’re likely to be better off by leaving them where they are or moving them to a new portfolio.

Transferring a Final Salary Pension

However, if you have defined benefit rights it’s a complicated process. This is because, essentially, you need to compare a yearly retirement income that’s guaranteed for life with the wide array of potential benefits that come with defined contribution (money purchase) arrangements.

A good adviser can handle the process right form the outset and maintain close contact with your scheme administrators to ensure you have all the required information at your fingertips.

Together, you and your chosen adviser can work out how much your transfer is worth – both as a future source of income and as a financial asset that can be passed to your beneficiaries.

Your adviser should:

  • Provide their professional opinion on whether the transfer makes good sense for you;
  • Help track down any missing or lost pension entitlements you may have;
  • Ensure your old scheme will authorise a transfer and that your new scheme will accept one;
  • Explain any fees or charges attached;
  • Discuss your options for when you could afford to retire;
  • The various combinations of tax-free cash and income open to you;
  • Highlight options such as flexi-access income drawdown;
  • Generate a projection of the investment performance that your new arrangement will need in order to at least match your previous benefits;
  • Design a portfolio for your transfer that matches your individual needs.

To do all this, your adviser will need to take a look at your finances in the round as it’s not just your pension assets that will be providing your income in retirement.

This means that there are probably two aspects to sorting out your pensions once and for all. The first is to contact your existing scheme providers to request transfer offers. The second is to find a reliable adviser who’s well versed in this field and can show you how to optimise the value of your hard-earned pension savings.

A final salary pension transfer won’t be right for most people. For the minority of people for whom this does make financial sense, they’ll need to seek regulated advice if their pension pot is worth more than £30,000.

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