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How to Get £2,000 Per Month in Pension Income (2026)

Find out how much pension pot you need to generate £2,000 Per Month in retirement. Annuity vs drawdown calculations, state pension contribution, tax implications, and budgeting tips.

12 min read Updated April 2026

How to Get £2,000 Per Month in Pension Income

Achieving £2,000 Per Month (£24,000 per year) in retirement income is a common goal for UK retirees. Whether this target covers your essential living costs or funds a more comfortable lifestyle depends on your circumstances, but the key question is the same: how large a pension pot do you need, and what is the best way to generate this income?

This guide breaks down the exact pot sizes required using both annuity and drawdown approaches, explains how the State Pension contributes, and covers the tax you will pay on pension income at this level.

Key calculation: To receive £2,000 Per Month total retirement income (including the State Pension of £998/month), you need a private pension generating approximately £1,002/month. This requires a pot of around £308,385 for an annuity, or £400,900 for drawdown at 4%.

How Much Pension Pot Do You Need for £2,000 Per Month?

The pot size depends on how you plan to access your pension. The two main options are purchasing a lifetime annuity (guaranteed income for life) or using flexi-access drawdown (withdrawing from an invested pot).

MethodPot RequiredTax-Free Cash (25%)Income Source
Level annuity (age 67)£308,385£77,096Guaranteed for life
Drawdown at 4%£400,900£100,225Flexible, investment dependent
Drawdown at 3.5%£458,171£114,543Conservative, longer lasting

These calculations assume you also receive the full State Pension of £11,973 per year (£998 per month). If you do not qualify for the full State Pension, you will need a larger private pension pot to make up the difference.

State Pension Contribution

The full new State Pension for 2026/27 is £11,973 per year (approximately £998 per month). This covers 50% of your £2,000 Per Month target income, meaning you need your private pension to provide the remaining £12,027 per year (£1,002 per month).

To receive the full State Pension, you need 35 qualifying years of National Insurance contributions. You can check your State Pension forecast at gov.uk/check-state-pension to see what you are on track to receive.

Tax Implications at £2,000 Per Month

Your total gross retirement income of £24,000 per year is subject to income tax. The personal allowance for 2026/27 is £12,570, so the first £12,570 of your income is tax-free.

At £24,000 per year, you would pay basic-rate tax (20%) on £11,430 of taxable income. Your estimated annual tax bill would be approximately £2,286, leaving you with a net income of around £21,714 per year (£1,810 per month).

Remember that the 25% tax-free cash from your pension pot is not counted as taxable income. This lump sum (which could be £77,096 on the annuity calculation) provides additional capital without triggering a tax bill.

Drawdown vs Annuity for £2,000 Per Month

Annuity approach

An annuity gives you a guaranteed £2,000 Per Month for life (in combination with the State Pension). You never need to worry about investment performance or running out of money. The trade-off is that you lose access to your capital, and a level annuity loses purchasing power to inflation over time.

With a pot of £308,385, after taking £77,096 as tax-free cash, the remaining £231,289 would purchase a level annuity paying approximately £12,027 per year. An inflation-linked annuity would start lower but maintain its real value over time.

Drawdown approach

Drawdown keeps your pot invested and allows you to withdraw £1,002 per month from an invested pot. This gives you flexibility and potential for growth, but your income is not guaranteed and depends on investment returns. A 4% withdrawal rate is commonly used as a sustainable benchmark.

With a pot of £400,900, after taking 25% tax-free cash, the remaining £300,675 in drawdown at 4% would generate approximately £12,027 per year to supplement the State Pension.

How Long Will Your Pot Last at £2,000 Per Month?

If you are using drawdown, the size of your pot determines how long it can sustain your target income. The table below shows how long different pot sizes would last when withdrawing £12,027 per year (the private pension portion of your £2,000 Per Month target), assuming different investment growth rates.

Pension PotAfter Tax-Free Cash (75%)Years at 4% GrowthYears at 5% Growth
£100,000£75,0008 years8 years
£200,000£150,00018 years21 years
£300,000£225,00036 years50+ years
£400,000£300,00050+ years50+ years
£500,000£375,00050+ years50+ years
£750,000£562,50050+ years50+ years

These projections assume a constant withdrawal of £12,027 per year from the remaining pot after 25% tax-free cash. In practice, you might adjust withdrawals based on market conditions and your changing needs.

Practical Budgeting Tips for £2,000 Per Month Retirement

  • Map your essential costs first: Housing, council tax, utilities, food, and insurance should be covered by guaranteed income (State Pension plus annuity if applicable).
  • Build a cash buffer: Keep 1-2 years of living expenses in an easy-access savings account to avoid selling investments during market downturns.
  • Review withdrawal rates annually: Adjust your drawdown based on your remaining pot size and market conditions. In good years, consider taking less and letting your pot grow.
  • Plan for inflation: At 3% annual inflation, £2,000 Per Month will have the purchasing power of approximately £1,100 per month in 20 years. Build inflation protection into your plan.
  • Consider phased retirement: Working part-time in early retirement, even a few days per month, can significantly reduce the amount you need to draw from your pension.

Frequently Asked Questions

To receive £2,000 Per Month in total retirement income (including State Pension), you need a private pension pot of approximately £308,385 for an annuity or £400,900 for drawdown at 4%. The full State Pension contributes £998 per month towards your target.
£2,000 Per Month (£24,000/year) exceeds the minimum retirement standard but falls below the moderate standard of £31,300. It provides a modest but manageable retirement.
On total retirement income of £24,000 per year, your estimated annual income tax is approximately £2,286. The first £12,570 is tax-free under the personal allowance. The remainder is taxed at the 20% basic rate.
Yes. The full State Pension of £11,973 per year (£998 per month) counts as part of your total retirement income. You only need your private pension to generate the remaining £1,002 per month.
An annuity guarantees £2,000 Per Month for life (combined with the State Pension) but requires a larger pot of £308,385. Drawdown needs a smaller pot of £400,900 at 4% but carries investment risk. Many retirees combine both for security and flexibility.

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