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State Pension · Pre-2016 starting amount

Pre-2016 starting amount explained (2026/27)

Many UK pensioners reaching State Pension Age between 2016 and roughly 2030 have an NI record that spans both the old and new systems. HMRC calculates a "starting amount" using both systems and uses the higher of the two as your base. This is why some people receive more than the headline £241.30/week, sometimes much more.

5-minute read

The starting amount in one paragraph: if you have NI contributions both before and after 6 April 2016, HMRC calculates what you'd have received under the old system at April 2016, and what you'd have received under the new system at April 2016. Your starting amount is the higher of the two. From there, post-2016 NI years add to your pension up to the full new State Pension cap — but if your starting amount was already above the full rate, the excess becomes a "protected payment" that's also paid forever (just not uprated by the triple lock).

Why a starting amount exists

The April 2016 reform created a new State Pension at a higher headline weekly rate than the old basic State Pension, but it removed two important pre-2016 features:

Many higher earners and women with Cat B rights would have been worse off under a cold switchover. The starting-amount calculation prevents that — you can't be put into a worse position by the reform.

The two parallel calculations

HMRC performs both calculations at 6 April 2016 and compares:

Old system calculationNew system calculation
Basic State Pension at 30/30 years = £156.20/week in 2026/27 figures (old basic uprated)Full new State Pension at 35/35 years = £241.30/week in 2026/27 figures
+ Additional State Pension (SERPS + S2P) built up before April 2016Pro-rata starting amount for any qualifying years pre-2016
+ Cat B / derived rights if married(No derived rights under new system)
− Contracted-out deduction (if applicable)− Contracted-out deduction (different formula)
= Old system value at April 2016= New system value at April 2016

Higher of the two becomes your starting amount.

What happens to post-2016 NI years

Each post-2016 qualifying year is worth 1/35 of the full new State Pension — about £6.58/week (£342/year) in 2026/27 figures.

The "protected payment" mechanism

If your starting amount exceeded the full new State Pension (i.e., the old system would have been more generous), the excess is preserved forever as a "protected payment".

Critically: the protected payment is uprated by CPI inflation only, not the triple lock. The base £241.30 component goes up by the highest of CPI, earnings, or 2.5%. The protected payment goes up only by CPI.

Over time, this means the protected payment erodes in real value relative to the base. But it never disappears — you still receive it for life.

Worked example 1: Higher earner, lots of SERPS

Mr A reached SPA in 2020. NI history: 38 years of contributions, all earnings-related, well above the SERPS earnings cap. He contributed to SERPS 1985-2002 and S2P 2002-2016. Never contracted out.

Worked example 2: Lower earner, mostly basic-rate work

Ms B reached SPA in 2024. NI history: 30 years pre-2016, 8 years post-2016. Earned at SERPS-cap minimum, with some contracted-out years (1990-2000).

Ms B receives slightly less than the full new State Pension because her contracted-out years and basic-rate earnings limited both pathways.

Why this matters: checking your forecast

Your State Pension forecast shows your current entitlement and the maximum you could reach if you make any further qualifying years. For people with complex pre-2016 history, the forecast may show:

The "buy more years" tool tells you whether voluntary Class 3 contributions would increase your pension — for some borrowers it's worthless (already at the max), for others it's the best £956.80 they'll ever spend.

Common starting-amount misunderstandings

Sources

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