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What Replaced the Lifetime Allowance? New Rules Explained

The pension lifetime allowance was abolished in April 2024. In its place came a new system of lump sum limits. This guide explains the new rules, what they mean for your pension, and what happened to existing protections.

12 min read Updated March 2026

The End of the Lifetime Allowance

The pension lifetime allowance (LTA) was a cap on the total amount of pension savings you could build up without facing a tax charge. It stood at £1,073,100 when the government announced in the 2023 Spring Budget that it would be abolished. The LTA charge was removed from April 2023, and the allowance itself was formally abolished from 6 April 2024.

This was one of the most significant pension tax changes in decades. For the first time since 2006, there is no overall limit on how much you can accumulate in your pension savings. However, the government did not remove all restrictions. Instead, it introduced a new framework of lump sum allowances that limit tax-free cash payments.

The New Allowances

Two new allowances replaced the lifetime allowance:

1. The Lump Sum Allowance (LSA)

The Lump Sum Allowance limits the total amount of tax-free lump sums you can take from your pensions during your lifetime. The standard LSA is £268,275 – which is 25% of the old LTA of £1,073,100.

The LSA covers:

  • Pension commencement lump sums (your 25% tax-free cash)
  • Uncrystallised funds pension lump sums (the tax-free portion – 25%)
  • Small pot lump sums (the tax-free portion)
  • Trivial commutation lump sums (the tax-free portion)

2. The Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA)

The LSDBA is a broader limit of £1,073,100 that covers the same lump sums as the LSA, plus certain death benefit lump sums and serious ill-health lump sums. It is the overall cap on tax-free lump sums across your lifetime and death.

AllowanceStandard AmountWhat It Covers
Lump Sum Allowance (LSA)£268,275Tax-free cash taken during lifetime
Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA)£1,073,100All tax-free lump sums including death benefits
Old Lifetime Allowance (abolished)£1,073,100Total pension savings (no longer applies)
Key difference: Under the old LTA, the total size of your pension pot was restricted. Under the new rules, there is no limit on how large your pot can grow. The limits only apply to tax-free lump sums. Income drawn from your pension (whether through drawdown or annuity) is taxed at your marginal rate with no cap.

How the New Rules Work in Practice

Tax-free cash

You can still take 25% of your pension pot as tax-free cash, but the total across all your pensions is capped at £268,275. If you have a pension pot of £1,073,100 or less, you can take the full 25% tax-free. If your pot exceeds this, the tax-free amount is capped.

For example, if your total pension savings are £2,000,000, you cannot take £500,000 tax-free (25%). Your tax-free cash is limited to £268,275. Anything above this is taxable at your marginal income tax rate.

No limit on pension income

There is no restriction on how much pension income you can receive. Whether you take income through drawdown, an annuity, or a defined benefit pension, there is no cap on the amount. You simply pay income tax on pension income at your marginal rate (after any tax-free cash).

Death benefits

If you die before age 75, lump sum death benefits paid from your pension are tax-free up to the remaining LSDBA (after deducting any tax-free cash you already took during your lifetime). If the death benefit exceeds the remaining LSDBA, the excess is taxed at the recipient's marginal rate.

If you die after 75, lump sum death benefits are always taxed at the recipient's marginal income tax rate, regardless of the LSDBA.

What Happened to LTA Protections?

Many people had applied for various forms of lifetime allowance protection over the years. These protections have been converted into transitional provisions under the new framework:

Old ProtectionOld LTA AmountNew LSANew LSDBA
No protection£1,073,100£268,275£1,073,100
Fixed Protection 2016£1,250,000£312,500£1,250,000
Individual Protection 2016Up to £1,250,00025% of protected amountProtected amount
Fixed Protection 2014£1,500,000£375,000£1,500,000
Individual Protection 2014Up to £1,500,00025% of protected amountProtected amount
Enhanced ProtectionUnlimited£375,000 (max)Unlimited
Primary ProtectionVaries25% of protected amountProtected amount
Important: If you had lifetime allowance protection, do not assume it is no longer relevant. Your protected amount has been converted into potentially higher LSA and LSDBA limits. Check with your pension provider or financial adviser to confirm your new allowances.

Transitional Rules for Pre-April 2024 Benefits

If you had already taken some pension benefits before 6 April 2024, the amount of LTA you used has been converted into LSA and LSDBA usage. Your pension provider should have provided you with a statement showing your remaining allowances under the new system.

The conversion formula is based on the percentage of the LTA you had used. For example, if you had used 50% of your LTA before April 2024, you have used 50% of your LSA (£134,137.50) and 50% of your LSDBA (£536,550).

Who Benefits from the Abolition?

The abolition of the lifetime allowance primarily benefits those with large pension pots – particularly:

  • High earners who can now continue contributing to their pensions without fear of a lifetime limit
  • Long-serving defined benefit members (such as NHS consultants, senior teachers, and civil servants) whose pension accrual previously bumped up against the LTA
  • Successful investors whose pension pots grew beyond the LTA through investment returns
  • Business owners who can now make larger employer contributions over time

For most people with pension pots below £1,073,100, the practical impact is minimal. The tax-free cash limit of £268,275 is more restrictive than the old system only for those who would have taken 25% of a pot exceeding £1,073,100.

Pension Contributions After the LTA Abolition

With no lifetime limit, the main constraint on pension savings is now the annual allowance of £60,000. This means you can continue contributing to your pension every year without worrying about a cumulative cap. For high earners subject to the tapered annual allowance, the annual limit may be lower, but there is still no lifetime restriction.

This is particularly relevant for people who had previously stopped contributing to their pensions because they were approaching the LTA. Under the new rules, there is no reason to stop saving – though you should still consider whether pension saving is the most tax-efficient option compared to ISAs and other investments.

What You Should Do

  1. Check your LSA and LSDBA – ask your pension providers for your remaining allowances under the new framework
  2. Review any protections – if you had LTA protection, confirm your enhanced LSA and LSDBA amounts
  3. Consider resuming contributions – if you stopped contributing due to the LTA, the new rules may make it worthwhile to restart
  4. Plan your tax-free cash – with the £268,275 LSA, consider how to use your tax-free entitlement most effectively across multiple pension pots
  5. Review death benefit planning – the new LSDBA rules may affect how your pension is taxed on death
  6. Seek advice – the transitional rules are complex, especially if you have protections or have already taken benefits
Need help navigating the new rules? The transition from the lifetime allowance to the new framework can be confusing, especially if you have protections or multiple pension pots. A qualified pension adviser can help you understand your position. Use our free matching service to find an FCA-regulated adviser.

Frequently Asked Questions

The lifetime allowance was replaced from April 2024 by two new allowances: the Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) of £268,275 which limits tax-free cash, and the Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA) of £1,073,100 which caps total tax-free lump sums including death benefits.
No. There is no longer any overall cap on the amount you can hold in pension savings. The annual allowance (£60,000) still limits how much you can contribute each year, but there is no lifetime limit on the total size of your pension pot.
Under the new rules, the maximum tax-free cash you can take across all your pensions is £268,275 (the Lump Sum Allowance). This is 25% of the old lifetime allowance of £1,073,100. Some people with transitional protection may have a higher limit.
The LSDBA is a £1,073,100 limit on the total amount of tax-free lump sums you can receive from your pensions, including tax-free cash, serious ill-health lump sums, and certain death benefit lump sums paid to beneficiaries.
If you had valid lifetime allowance protection (Fixed Protection, Individual Protection, etc.) before April 2024, this has been converted into transitional provisions that may give you a higher Lump Sum Allowance and LSDBA than the standard amounts.
If you die before age 75, lump sum death benefits are tax-free up to the remaining LSDBA. If you die after 75, lump sum death benefits are taxed at the recipient's marginal income tax rate. Drawdown income paid to beneficiaries is always taxed at their marginal rate if you died after 75.

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