What Can You Do With a £400,000 Pension Pot?
A £400k pension pot gives you significant flexibility in retirement. You have multiple options for generating income and can likely achieve a comfortable or even affluent retirement lifestyle.
When you reach pension access age (currently 55, rising to 57 from April 2028), you can take up to 25% of your pot as tax-free cash. On a £400,000 pot, that gives you a tax-free lump sum of £100,000. The remaining £300,000 can then be used to provide retirement income through drawdown, an annuity, or a combination of both.
Understanding how different withdrawal strategies affect your income is essential for making the right choice. Below we compare the main options available with a pot of this size.
Drawdown vs Annuity Income With £400k
The two main ways to convert your pension pot into income are flexi-access drawdown and purchasing a lifetime annuity. Each has distinct advantages depending on your circumstances, health, and appetite for risk.
| Option | Annual Income | Monthly Income | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level annuity (age 67) | £15,600 | £1,300 | Guaranteed for life |
| Drawdown at 4% | £12,000 | £1,000 | Flexible, pot remains invested |
| Drawdown at 3.5% | £10,500 | £875 | More conservative, longer lasting |
These figures are based on the remaining £300,000 after taking your 25% tax-free lump sum. Annuity rates assume a single-life, level annuity purchased at age 67 in 2026. Drawdown figures assume the stated withdrawal rate applied to the remaining pot, with income varying as the pot value changes over time.
When drawdown makes sense
Flexi-access drawdown keeps your pension invested and allows you to vary how much income you take each year. This suits people who want flexibility, have other income sources, or want to leave their remaining pot to beneficiaries. However, drawdown carries investment risk – if markets fall, your pot could shrink and your sustainable income may decrease.
When an annuity makes sense
An annuity provides a guaranteed income for life, removing the risk of running out of money. This is particularly valuable if you have no other guaranteed income beyond the State Pension, or if you value certainty over flexibility. Enhanced annuities may pay more if you have health conditions or lifestyle factors such as smoking.
With a larger pot of £400k, you might consider splitting your pot – using part to buy an annuity for essential expenses and keeping the rest in drawdown for flexibility and growth potential.
Tax Implications of a £400k Pension Pot
The first 25% of your pension (£100,000) can be taken completely tax-free. After that, any income you draw from your pension – whether through drawdown or annuity payments – is taxed as earned income at your marginal rate.
For the 2026/27 tax year, the personal allowance is £12,570. If your only income is from your pension and the State Pension (currently £11,973 per year), you need to consider the combined total when calculating your tax liability.
With a pot of £400k, careful tax planning becomes important. Drawing too much in a single year could push you into the higher-rate (40%) tax band, which starts at £50,270. Spreading withdrawals across tax years or using a phased drawdown approach can significantly reduce your overall tax bill.
Tax-free cash options
You do not have to take all your tax-free cash at once. Uncrystallised funds pension lump sums (UFPLS) allow you to take multiple smaller withdrawals, each with 25% tax-free and 75% taxable. This can be a useful strategy for managing your tax position year by year.
Is £400k Enough to Retire On?
A £400k pension pot puts you in a strong position for retirement. Combined with the full State Pension of £11,973, an annuity income of £15,600 gives you approximately £27,573 per year – close to or exceeding the comfortable retirement standard of £43,100. With drawdown, you may be able to generate even more income in the early years of retirement.
Strategies to Make Your £400k Pot Work Harder
- Delay retirement: Each year you delay accessing your pension allows it to grow further. Delaying State Pension also increases your annual entitlement by approximately 5.8% per year.
- Phased retirement: Consider working part-time and drawing a smaller pension income initially, preserving more of your pot for later years.
- Tax-efficient withdrawals: Draw income up to your personal allowance threshold before touching taxable pension income to minimise your tax bill.
- Blend drawdown and annuity: Use an annuity to cover essential costs and drawdown for discretionary spending, giving you both security and flexibility.
- Review your investment strategy: As you approach and enter retirement, ensure your drawdown investments are appropriately diversified and not overly exposed to volatile assets.
What Happens to Your £400k Pot When You Die?
How your pension is treated on death depends on how you have accessed it. If your pot is in drawdown, the remaining funds can typically be passed to your nominated beneficiaries. If you die before age 75, beneficiaries receive the funds tax-free. After 75, they pay income tax at their marginal rate on withdrawals.
An annuity, by contrast, usually dies with you unless you have purchased a joint-life or guaranteed-period annuity. With a pot of £400k, it is worth considering whether the flexibility of drawdown for inheritance planning outweighs the security of an annuity.