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Pensions · Annual allowance

Pension carry-forward + tapered allowance stack

Pension carry-forward lets you use up to three years of unused annual allowance in a single tax year — potentially contributing up to £240,000 in one year (with full £60,000 allowance + 3 × £60,000 from prior years). But the rules interact with the tapered annual allowance, which can shrink the available allowance for high earners. Here's the 2026/27 mechanic, with worked examples.

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What you need to know: Pension carry-forward + tapered allowance stack

Quick answer: Carry-forward lets you use unused pension annual allowance from the three preceding tax years (2023/24, 2024/25, 2025/26) in the current 2026/27 tax year. The maximum theoretical contribution: £240,000 (£60k current year + 3 × £60k prior years). To use carry-forward, you must have been a member of a registered pension scheme in…

Key points:

Carry-forward lets you use unused pension annual allowance from the three preceding tax years (2023/24, 2024/25, 2025/26) in the current 2026/27 tax year. The maximum theoretical contribution: £240,000 (£60k current year + 3 × £60k prior years). To use carry-forward, you must have been a member of a registered pension scheme in each of the years you're carrying forward from, AND you can only contribute up to 100% of your relevant earnings in the current year. The tapered annual allowance complicates things for earners with adjusted income over £260,000.

The basic rules

Carry-forward applies to pension contributions made in the current tax year. To qualify:

The £240k theoretical maximum — worked example

Earner with £250k income in 2026/27, never contributed to pension before

2023/24 unused allowance£60,000
2024/25 unused allowance£60,000
2025/26 unused allowance£60,000
2026/27 current year allowance£60,000
Total available£240,000

Catch: must be a pension scheme member in 2023/24, 2024/25, 2025/26. If they only opened a pension on 1 January 2026, they cannot carry forward from those years — only from when they were a member onwards.

Solution: open a pension with £1 immediately (even basic SIPP) — this triggers membership and protects future carry-forward capacity.

The tapered annual allowance

For high earners, the annual allowance tapers down. The taper rule:

This means a senior executive with £260k of salary, no other income, and the full £60k auto-enrolment + salary sacrifice + employer pension contributions of £40k has adjusted income £300k — so taper reduces allowance from £60k to £40k.

The taper × carry-forward interaction

Each tax year has its own taper status. If your taper was different in past years, the carry-forward capacity per year reflects that year's tapered allowance — not the current year's.

YearAdjusted incomeTapered allowanceUsedAvailable carry-forward
2023/24£280,000£50,000£8,000£42,000
2024/25£250,000£60,000 (no taper)£8,000£52,000
2025/26£300,000£40,000£8,000£32,000
2026/27£280,000£50,000(planning)

In 2026/27, the carry-forward available is £42k + £52k + £32k = £126k from prior years, plus the current year's £50k = total possible contribution £176,000 (subject to having that much relevant earnings).

The order rules

HMRC requires carry-forward to be used in a specific order:

  1. Use the current year's allowance first (in our example: £50k of 2026/27).
  2. Then earliest unused year (2023/24).
  3. Then next (2024/25).
  4. Then most recent prior year (2025/26).

This matters because contributing £150k in 2026/27 doesn't just use "the carry-forward" — it uses (a) the full 2026/27 allowance and (b) parts of multiple prior years in order. Each year's allocation must be tracked.

Why this matters for high earners

The taper is the most aggressive UK tax provision for senior professionals. At adjusted income £360k+, the annual allowance is just £10,000. Without carry-forward, this would dramatically limit pension wealth-building.

Carry-forward provides three years of "rescue" capacity. For someone whose income spikes in one year (a bonus, a one-off equity event, an RSU vesting), carry-forward lets them defer pension contributions and make them all in one go.

Typical use case: City lawyer / partner with steady £200k income usually contributing £40k/year. Year 5: receives £500k equity exit. Adjusted income spikes to £700k. Allowance tapers to £10k. But they have ~£100k of carry-forward from prior years (where they only used £40k of £60k available). Total contribution capacity in the spike year: £10k + £100k = £110k.

Common mistakes

Sources and methodology

Carry-forward and tapered annual allowance rules follow sections 228–238 of the Finance Act 2004 (as amended) and HMRC's annual allowance guidance. For high-income cases with complex income mix (equity, partnership profits, rental), see the tax adviser recommendation. The methodology page documents sources.

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