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Investing how-to · UK 2026/27

How to transfer an old pension to a UK SIPP

Consolidating old workplace pensions into a SIPP can simplify your life, reduce fees and unlock investment choice. But pension transfers come with traps: defined benefit (DB) schemes should rarely be transferred, exit penalties exist on older policies, and the transfer process takes 6-12 weeks. Here is the careful step-by-step.

6-minute read

To transfer an old UK pension to a SIPP: (1) Decide if you should — never transfer a DB pension without specialist advice. (2) Get the current value from the old provider. (3) Check for exit penalties on policies started before 2001 (some have 5-30% penalties). (4) Initiate the transfer from the new SIPP provider — they do the paperwork. (5) Wait 6-12 weeks while assets are sold, transferred, and re-bought. (6) Reinvest at the new provider. Transfer values above £30,000 from a DB scheme require regulated advice by law.

Should you transfer? The DC vs DB distinction

Pension transfers fall into two categories with very different rules and outcomes.

TypeWhat you haveTransfer recommended?
Defined Contribution (DC)A pot of money invested in fundsOften yes — consolidation makes sense
Defined Benefit (DB) / Final SalaryA promise of guaranteed income for lifeAlmost always NO — these are extraordinarily valuable
Section 32 / Buy-Out BondA converted DB benefit, often with Guaranteed Annuity Rate (GAR)Often NO — GARs can be worth 2-3× current annuity rates
With-Profits Personal PensionDC pot with smoothed returns and bonusesCheck terminal bonus and MVR before transferring
DB transfers above £30,000 require regulated advice by law.The FCA mandates a "transfer value analysis" from an FCA-authorised pension transfer specialist. The standard advice for over 95% of DB members is: do not transfer. The guaranteed income is worth far more than the transfer value in almost all circumstances. Specialists who advise to transfer face scrutiny — most will not unless your circumstances are unusual.

Common pension types and what to do

Workplace DC pension from a previous employer

Auto-enrolment scheme (NEST, Smart Pension, Standard Life, Aviva, Legal & General workplace pensions). These are DC. Usually safe to transfer.

Old personal pension or stakeholder

Pre-2006 personal pensions sometimes have valuable features (GAR, protected tax-free cash above 25%). Check the policy schedule before transferring.

Section 32 buy-out bond

These were issued in the 1990s and early 2000s when DB members transferred out. Many have Guaranteed Annuity Rates (e.g. 8-12% annuity rate, vs ~6% current market). Transferring forfeits the GAR — usually a bad move.

SERPS / S2P contracted-out benefits

Some old pensions hold "protected rights" from contracting out of SERPS/S2P. Most can transfer with no issue — the protected status was removed in 2012.

Step-by-step transfer process

Step 1: Open the destination SIPPYou need an active SIPP before you can transfer in. See our SIPP opening guide.
Step 2: Gather old pension detailsFor each scheme: provider name, scheme name, your policy/membership number, current value (request via "transfer value statement" from old provider — free, usually arrives in 2-4 weeks). Some old providers charge for transfer value statements after the first one each year.
Step 3: Check for transfer penaltiesPersonal pensions started before 2001 may have "market value reduction" (MVR) penalties or initial-charge penalties. Ask the old provider directly: "What is the transfer value and are there any exit penalties or MVR adjustments?"
Step 4: Initiate transfer from new providerLog in to your new SIPP. Find "Transfer in" or "Pension transfer". Enter the old scheme details. The new provider sends a request to the old provider with your authority. You do not need to contact the old provider directly.
Step 5: Authorities and verificationSome old providers require you to sign a paper authority (Letter of Authority). Sign and return promptly — delays here add weeks.
Step 6: Assets sold and transferredFor DC pensions, the old provider sells your investments to cash, then transfers cash to the new SIPP. You are "out of the market" for typically 1-3 weeks. This is unavoidable.
Step 7: Reinvest at new providerCash arrives at the new SIPP. Buy investments according to your plan. Most SIPP providers send an email when cash arrives.

Timeline and the "out of market" period

StageTypical duration
Transfer value statement received from old provider2-4 weeks
Transfer authority signed and returned1-2 weeks
Old provider sells assets to cash1-2 weeks
Cash transferred to new provider3-7 working days
Cash arrives in new SIPP and ready to invest1-2 working days
Total typical timeline6-12 weeks
You cannot avoid the "out of market" period.While the cash is moving, markets can rise or fall — you have no exposure. Some investors prefer to transfer when they expect a market correction. In practice, market timing rarely works and the cleanest approach is to accept the 1-3 week out-of-market period.

Tax and tax-free cash considerations

Transferring DC to DC is tax-freeNo tax event on the transfer itself. You move from one pension to another with no Income Tax, CGT or Stamp Duty.
Protected tax-free cashSome old personal pensions had tax-free cash entitlement above 25% (relevant for pensions started before 6 April 2006). Transferring out can lose this protection unless it transfers en bloc. Specialist advice recommended if your protected cash exceeds £268,275.
The 25% tax-free cash transfers acrossStandard 25% Pension Commencement Lump Sum entitlement is preserved through transfers.

Common transfer mistakes

Mistake 1: Transferring a Section 32 with a GAR.Always check for Guaranteed Annuity Rates before transferring older policies. A GAR of 10% on a £50k pot could be worth £80,000+ in lifetime additional income — easy to lose by transferring carelessly.
Mistake 2: Triggering MPAA before transferring.If you've already accessed any pension flexibly, your Annual Allowance is capped at £10,000. This doesn't block transfers but be aware of the contribution implication going forward.
Mistake 3: Not getting written confirmation of transfer value.Some old providers' quotes vary by date. Get a written transfer value with a "guaranteed-until" date if possible. Otherwise transfer values can change between request and actual transfer.
Mistake 4: Transferring during pending changes.If your old scheme has announced upcoming improvements (better death benefits, bonus declarations), check the implementation date before transferring out.
Mistake 5: Forgetting the pension nominee form.Once the SIPP receives the transfer, complete the new provider's death beneficiary form. Your nominations on the old scheme do NOT transfer.

Check if a transfer makes sense

The pension calculator can model what your transferred pot will be worth at retirement, vs leaving it in the old scheme.

Open the pension calculator →

Sources and references

Pension transfer regulation from FCA pension transfer guidance. £30,000 DB transfer advice threshold from FCA Handbook COBS 19. Pension Protection Fund member alerts from PPF. Pension scheme registration and transfer mechanics from HMRC Pensions Tax Manual.

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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