Yes. You don’t pay income tax on the money you pay into your pension. The whole pre-tax amount goes into your pension savings.
now:pensions is a net pay arrangement. This means your pension payments come out of your earnings before taking off income tax.
Here’s how this works
- Your workplace takes your pension payments out of your salary before the tax comes off.
- You only pay tax on what’s left.
- So if you pay in £100, the full £100 goes into your pension savings.
- If you take the £100 as salary rather than paying it into your pension savings, you only get £80, because your workplace takes £20 out as income tax.
If you’re a higher-rate taxpayer, you’ll get tax relief on your pension payments at your highest rate.
If you don’t pay income tax, you don’t automatically get tax relief, but you’ll get a tax top-up from HM Revenue & Customs.
If you count as self-employed, you’ll need to claim your tax relief yourself when you do your self-assessment tax return.
Annual allowance
You can pay up to the whole of your salary – 100% – into your pension savings and still get tax relief, as long as the amount you and your workplace pay in doesn’t go over the annual allowance. This applies to all the pensions you’re actively saving into, including now:pensions and any personal pensions you have. It doesn’t apply to your State Pension.
For most people, the annual allowance is £60,000 for the tax year 2025 to 2026. If you go over this you’ll have to pay tax on the amount over the allowance.
If you use all your annual allowance in a tax year, carry forward allows you to use any unused annual allowance from the last three tax years. This means you could save more into your pension in the current tax year and still qualify for tax relief.
You can’t carry forward any annual allowance if you’ve triggered the money purchase annual allowance.
Money purchase annual allowance
If you start taking money out of your pension savings while you’re still paying in to them, the money purchase annual allowance – currently £10,000 a year – could affect you. This means the total amount you and your workplace can pay into your pension savings and still get tax relief goes down to £10,000 a year.