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Ltd Co · Employer pension · 2026/27

Employer pension contributions from your Ltd company (2026/27)

When your own limited company makes a pension contribution for you as a director, the contribution is deductible against corporation tax (25% saving), and you pay no personal tax or NI on it. For higher-rate and additional-rate director-shareholders, employer pension contributions are usually the single most tax-efficient extraction method.

5-minute read

Employer pension contributions in one paragraph: a contribution from your Ltd company to your pension is deductible against corporation tax, generally with no personal income tax, no NI, and no employee NI. Effective combined "tax cost" of getting £100 into your pension from company profits: about £75 (£25 of foregone CT). Compare to extracting via dividend (effective combined cost ~£55-60 net of CT and dividend tax for higher-rate payers), or salary (~£40-50 net of all taxes). Pension wins for any extraction above immediate cash needs.

How employer pension contributions work

This is different from a personal pension contribution (relief at source via SIPP), where you pay net of basic rate and the SIPP claims back 20% from HMRC.

The "wholly and exclusively" test

For a company pension contribution to be tax-deductible, it must be "wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the trade." HMRC's general view:

In practice, contributions up to the annual allowance (£60,000) for active working directors are very rarely challenged.

The pension annual allowance interaction

Employer contributions count against your pension annual allowance (£60,000 in 2026/27), just like personal contributions:

The 100% relevant earnings cap on personal contributions does NOT apply to employer contributions. So a director-shareholder taking a £12,570 salary can have a £60,000 employer pension contribution — the salary cap only restricts personal pension relief, not company contributions.

Worked example: high-profit director

Mr K is sole director of a tech consultancy. Company profit before director's salary: £200,000. Mr K has unused AA carry-forward of £120,000 from previous years (so total available AA: £60,000 + £120,000 = £180,000 this year).

Option A: Extract everything via salary + dividend.

Option B: Salary £12,570 + employer pension £60,000 (current year only) + dividend rest.

Option B retains more value because the £60,000 went into the pension wrapper essentially tax-free at extraction. When eventually drawn, it'll suffer some tax (25% tax-free, rest at marginal rate) but with planning that can be at basic rate in retirement — net retention ~80-90% of the original £60,000.

What's the catch?

Three things to be aware of:

For most director-shareholders, these are manageable trade-offs. Pension extraction is dominant from a tax perspective.

Practical mechanics

  1. Open a SIPP in your own name (Vanguard, AJ Bell, Hargreaves Lansdown, ii are common UK options).
  2. Give the SIPP provider your employer's details — many SIPP providers have specific employer-contribution forms.
  3. The company makes the contribution by BACS to the SIPP, with appropriate reference.
  4. The company books the payment as "employee benefit / pension" in the P&L (deductible).
  5. The contribution is reported on the company's Corporation Tax return.
  6. For Self Assessment, the contribution is NOT entered on your personal return at all — it never touched your income.

Common pension-from-company mistakes

Sources

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