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Investing how-to · UK 2026/27

How to take income from investments in UK retirement

You've built a portfolio. Retirement is here. How do you actually take income from it without running out? Two competing approaches dominate: "natural yield" (live off dividends and interest) and "total return drawdown" (sell what you need each year). Each has tax, behavioural and longevity implications. Here is the UK-specific framework.

6-minute read

For UK retirement income from investments: "natural yield" means living off dividends and interest only — simple but typically generates 2-3.5% of portfolio value per year, limiting spending. "Total return drawdown" means selling assets to cover the gap between yield and spending needs — more flexible but requires discipline. UK safe withdrawal rate is 3.3-3.7% of starting portfolio (lower than the US "4% rule"). Withdrawal order for tax efficiency: GIA dividends and capital gains first (using AEA + PSA + DA), then ISA, then pension.

The two competing approaches

Approach A: Natural yield (income-only)

Live off whatever your investments naturally pay out — dividends from equities, interest from bonds. Don't touch capital.

Pros:

Cons:

Approach B: Total return drawdown

Invest for the best long-term total return regardless of yield. Sell whatever you need each year to fund spending.

Pros:

Cons:

The UK Safe Withdrawal Rate — actually 3.3-3.7%

The famous "4% rule" comes from US studies of 1926-1990s data. UK-adjusted studies consistently show a lower safe withdrawal rate.

StudyMethodologyUK SWR for 30-year retirement
Bengen (1994, US)US data 1926-19924.0% (US, not UK)
Pfau (2010, UK)UK data 1900-2008, 60/403.05%
Pfau (2024 update)UK + global, 60/403.3-3.5%
Stamford Brook (2023)UK data, dynamic spending3.5-3.7% (variable)
Vanguard UK (2024)Monte Carlo, 60/403.3% (95% success)
Practical SWR rule of thumb for UK retirees3.5% of starting portfolio (£35,000/year from £1m) for a 30-year retirement at 60/40 equity/bond. Increase for shorter retirements, decrease for longer or more conservative assumptions. Variable spending (guardrails) can support 4%+ with low failure risk.

Tax-efficient withdrawal order — 2026/27

UK retirees often have multiple wrappers. The order in which you draw from each affects lifetime tax materially.

PrioritySourceReason
1GIA dividends within £500 allowanceTax-free — use it or lose it
2GIA savings interest within PSATax-free
3GIA capital gains within £3,000 AEATax-free
4State Pension (when in payment)Mandatory once started
5Pension up to your Personal Allowance (£12,570)Tax-free via PA
6Pension 25% tax-free cash if not already takenTax-free portion
7ISA withdrawalsAlready tax-free, no allowance limit
8Pension above basic-rate bandTaxed at marginal rate but flexible
9GIA gains above AEA18/24% CGT — less preferred

Worked example: 67-year-old retiree, £40,000 annual spending

Wealth: £200k GIA, £150k ISA, £500k pension. State Pension £11,500/yr started.

Optimal draw:

  • State Pension: £11,500
  • Pension drawdown: £1,070 (to use full £12,570 PA tax-free)
  • GIA dividend income: £500 (within DA) + £900 (within PSA on interest)
  • GIA capital gains: £3,000 (within AEA)
  • ISA withdrawal: £23,030 to top up to £40,000 (no allowance constraint)
  • Total tax paid: £0

The same retiree taking £40,000 entirely from pension would pay tax on £40,000 - £12,570 = £27,430 at 20% = £5,486. Optimal sequencing saves £5,000+ per year.

Sequence-of-returns risk

The biggest risk in drawdown retirement isn't running out of money slowly — it's a bad market in the early years.

Two retirees with identical average returns, very different outcomes

Both start with £500k, withdraw £25k/year inflation-adjusted, 30 years.

  • Retiree A: +10% / -10% / +10% / -10% pattern. Average 0%. Ends with: ~£260k (most years inflation-adjusted)
  • Retiree B: -10% / +10% / -10% / +10% pattern. SAME average 0%. Ends with: ~£0.

The same average return produced vastly different outcomes. Retiree B faced bad returns while drawing — capital eroded faster than it could recover.

Defence 1: Cash buffer for the first 2-3 yearsHold 2-3 years of expenses (£75,000-£100,000 for someone spending £35k/year) in cash. Spend from cash during bad markets, replenish from investments during good markets. Means you never sell during a crash.
Defence 2: Variable spending (guardrails)Set a base spending level. Increase by inflation in good years. Reduce by 5-10% in years where portfolio falls below a trigger. Far more sustainable than rigid 3.5% fixed withdrawal.
Defence 3: Partial annuityAnnuitise enough capital to cover essential expenses. Eliminates sequence risk on the "must-have" portion of income. Keep the rest in drawdown for flexibility.

Common income-drawdown mistakes

Mistake 1: Drawing from pension first.Pension is the most tax-efficient bequest to family (income-tax-free if you die before 75; taxable at beneficiary marginal rate after 75). Drawing GIA + ISA first preserves pension wealth for both yourself (continued growth) and your heirs.
Mistake 2: Using 4% rule blindly.UK SWR is 3.3-3.7%, not 4%. Using 4% assumes US-style market returns which UK hasn't matched. One extra year of work per £10k of annual spending is a fair price for safety.
Mistake 3: Chasing high-yield income funds."Income" funds often have higher yields but lower total returns. A 6% yield from a fund that loses 3% per year of capital is a 3% real return — worse than a 2% yield fund that grows 5% per year. Total return matters more than yield.
Mistake 4: Forgetting MPAA when re-contributing.If you've already taken flexible pension income, your Annual Allowance is capped at £10,000. Many retirees who go back to part-time work want to keep contributing — but MPAA limits this severely.
Mistake 5: Withdrawing from ISA emergency fund unnecessarily.ISA is the most flexible wrapper but also one of the most valuable for inheritance and ongoing tax shelter. If you have GIA assets, draw those first while using ISA only as a backup.

Project your drawdown

The pension drawdown tax calculator shows how much tax you'd pay on flexible pension withdrawals at different levels.

Open drawdown tax calculator →

Sources and references

UK SWR research from Pfau (2024), Stamford Brook (2023), Vanguard UK Monte Carlo (2024). Sequence-of-returns analysis from Bengen (1994) and subsequent UK adaptations. Tax-efficient withdrawal order based on 2026/27 allowances from gov.uk.

UK Tax Drag is not authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority and does not provide regulated financial or tax advice — see the content disclaimer for the full position. There are no affiliate links on this page — provider names are mentioned only to illustrate how different providers handle the same procedure.

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