Retirement planning often becomes either too vague or too technical. The normal-person question is clearer: what income arrives each month, what bills remain, what savings bridge the gaps, and what decisions should not be rushed?
A retirement countdown should start before the last payslip. It should identify State Pension age, private pension access, tax, debt, housing, benefits, emergency cash, wills, insurance and the order in which money will be used.
Five years out
- Check your State Pension forecast and National Insurance record.
- Find old pensions and understand each pot: provider, value, charges, guarantees, access age and beneficiary nominations.
- Start reducing expensive debt where possible before income becomes less flexible.
One year out
- Build a retirement budget using essential, comfortable and discretionary spending.
- Check tax on pension withdrawals and whether taking cash could push income into a higher band.
- Use Pension Wise or regulated advice before major drawdown, annuity or transfer decisions.
First retirement year
- Do not assume spending will be smooth. Travel, home repairs, gifts and one-off changes can distort the first year.
- Keep emergency cash separate from investment withdrawals.
- Review benefits, council tax support, wills, powers of attorney and insurance needs.
The simple action order
| Moment | What to do | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 5 years before | Check State Pension forecast and pension list. | Missing pensions and NI gaps take time to fix. |
| 12 months before | Model income, tax and spending by month. | Retirement fails through cashflow gaps, not just low totals. |
| At retirement | Get guidance before irreversible choices. | Drawdown, annuity and lump-sum decisions can be hard to undo. |
Retirement traps
- Taking pension cash before understanding tax and benefit effects.
- Forgetting old workplace pensions.
- Planning only for average monthly bills and ignoring repairs or care costs.
- Using investments for emergencies because no cash buffer exists.
Where this connects on UK Tax Drag
Use this guide as the plain-English route, then open the calculator or worksheet that matches the immediate decision.