This calculator will help highlight how close to your target you are with regard to establishing a decent pension.
It will only provide a very general picture and we strongly recommend that we conduct a proper audit of your position in which we will assess all of your current arangements and make suitable recommendations. That said if you enter all the information correctly and it suggests that you need to save £300pm, and you are only saving £50 then it is fair to say that some additional planning will be needed.
Explanatory Notes
If you have been in such a scheme for ten years, and expect to stay until retirement in twenty more, then enter 30.
If you have spent five years with such an employer and then left, enter five. However note that this calculator assumes that your current salary is the relevant one, whereas in fact presumably your scheme salary was lower. In this case the calculator will OVERESTIMATE your pension.
If you have benefits from such a scheme and want to see how they affect you then run the calculator using the term, the salary value that you had when you left the scheme, and the term to retirement that applied when you left the scheme. This will be more accurate, but still not to be relied upon.
Because of the way that the math operates there is an added complexity when considering the effect of Inflation on Regular Savings. In short if you invest £1000 a year then , because of inflation, it appears that each year you invest less and less in real terms. If you want to se what happens if you invest the same amount in real terms then set the Inflation at 1, and use a conservative growth rate.
Enter in the form 1.06 for 6%.
In the internal math the growth rate is reduced by 1% to represent fund charges, as per Stakeholder. Your actual pension costs may be different.