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Pensions · DB Transfers

UK DB transfer process step-by-step

The DB transfer process typically takes 4-12 months from initial CETV request to settlement. Most of that time is waiting on scheme administrators and FCA-regulated advisers. Here's exactly what happens, what to expect, and how to keep the process moving.

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The UK DB pension transfer process has 6 stages: (1) request CETV from scheme administrator (3-12 weeks), (2) engage FCA-authorised Pension Transfer Specialist for advice (2-6 weeks), (3) receive Transfer Value Comparator (TVC) report (1-3 weeks), (4) make transfer decision and complete cooling-off period (mandatory 14 days), (5) open receiving SIPP and submit transfer paperwork (1-2 weeks), (6) scheme administrator transfers funds and confirms (4-12 weeks). Total: 4-12 months typically. CETV statement is valid for 3 months only — if the process takes longer, you may need a new CETV.

Stage 1 — Request your CETV statement

Contact the scheme administrator. This is the company or trust running your DB pension — typically the employer's pensions team or a third-party administrator like XPS, Buck, Hymans Robertson, Mercer.

What to request: "I formally request my Cash Equivalent Transfer Value statement under my statutory right (Pension Schemes Act 1993 / 2015)."

Schemes must provide this free once per 12-month period. Additional requests may incur fees.

Timeline: scheme must respond within 3 months. In practice, well-administered schemes provide statements within 4-8 weeks.

Stage 2 — Engage an FCA-authorised Pension Transfer Specialist

For DB transfers over £30,000, you must obtain regulated advice from an FCA-authorised firm. Two routes:

Cost: typical DB transfer advice fee ranges £3,000-£10,000 depending on complexity. The fee is paid whether the transfer proceeds or not.

Timeline: initial consultation 1-2 weeks; full advice production 2-6 weeks.

Stage 3 — Receive the Transfer Value Comparator (TVC) report

The TVC is the key document. It mathematically compares:

The TVC includes:

Stage 4 — Make decision + complete cooling-off

You receive the TVC + adviser recommendation. Three options:

If you proceed: mandatory 14-day cooling-off period. During this window, you can change your mind at no cost.

Stage 5 — Open the receiving SIPP and submit paperwork

You need a SIPP to receive the transferred funds. Major UK SIPP providers:

Steps:

  1. Open the receiving SIPP. Identity verification, bank linking. Usually 5-10 working days.
  2. Sign the transfer authority form. Your adviser typically prepares this.
  3. Submit to current scheme administrator with CETV statement.

Stage 6 — Scheme transfers funds and confirms

The scheme administrator processes the transfer:

Timeline: 4-12 weeks typically. Faster for well-organised schemes; slower for underfunded or complex schemes.

You receive: the SIPP credited with the transferred amount; written confirmation from the original scheme that your DB rights have been extinguished.

What happens to your original pension rights

Once transferred, your DB pension rights are permanently extinguished. You no longer have any claim to the future DB payments. The transfer is irreversible.

Your SIPP now has the transferred amount + you bear full investment + longevity risk going forward.

Common process delays

Costs to expect

CostTypical range
CETV statement£0 (statutory free once per year)
FCA-regulated transfer advice£3,000 - £10,000
Receiving SIPP setup£0 - £400
Annual SIPP fee (ongoing)£100 - £400
Transaction costs (initial investment)£30 - £150
One-off cost of transfer£3,000 - £10,500

Sources and methodology

Regulatory process from Pension Schemes Act 2015 (Section 48), FCA COBS rules, and Pensions Regulator guidance. DB transfer decisions require FCA-regulated advice. This page is educational only. See the tax adviser editorial recommendation for tax-planning; for transfer advice itself, find an FCA-authorised Pension Transfer Specialist via the FCA Register.

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