Retirement
For benefits built up before April 2014, your NPA is 65. This is the age at which you can take those benefits with no adjustment for early payment.
For career average pension, your NPA is the same as your state pension age (with a minimum of age 65). You can check your normal pension age by looking up your current state pension age. Information is available here.
You can also use the government’s state pension age calculator to find out your state pension age. Please note, this calculator does not include further proposed changes to state pension age. If your state pension age increases in the future, your NPA for the LGPS pension you build up from April 2014 will also be increased.
Premature retirement
If your employment is terminated by redundancy or “in the efficient discharge of the employer’s functions”, your pension benefits will be payable immediately with no actuarial reduction.
Premature retirement is only possible from the age of 55. The earliest age that you can take your pension will increase from age 55 to 57 from 6 April 2028.
Actuarially reduced benefits
You can choose to take your benefits from the age of 55 but these will be actuarially reduced (unless your employer offers to waive the reduction and pay the difference themselves) to account for the fact that they are being paid early, i.e. before NPA.
Actuarially enhanced benefits
If you work past NPA without claiming your pension, your benefits will be enhanced to account for the fact they are paid late. However, all pension benefits must be put into payment before you reach the age of 75.
You cannot take benefits built up to April 2014 separately from the benefits you build up from April 2014. All of your pension would have to be drawn at the same time if retiring voluntarily.
Rule of 85 protection
For those members who have ‘rule of 85 protection’, this will continue to apply. It protects some or all of a member’s benefits from the normal early payment reduction and will automatically be applied (except where a member voluntarily draws their pension on or after age 55 and before age 60, as this is a new option in the scheme from April 2014). To have rule of 85 protection you must have been a member of the LGPS on 30 September 2006.
Ill-health retirement
From 1 April 2008, there was a three-tier ill-health retirement scheme. This remains unchanged in the LGPS 2014 scheme.
To qualify for ill-health retirement you must have two years’ membership of the LGPS and, your employer must believe you are permanently incapable of doing your own job until normal pension age and incapable of ‘gainful employment’, defined as 30 hours’ work per week over 12 months. Your employer must get the opinion of an independent occupational health physician appointed by them before it makes its decision.
Tier 1
If it is found there is no reasonable prospect of you being able to return to work before the age of 65, your pension will be enhanced with service equal to all prospective service from date of termination of contract to NPA.
Tier 2
If your ill-health leaves you permanently incapable of undertaking your current duties and you are unlikely to be able to undertake gainful employment within a reasonable time but you are expected to be able to undertake gainful employment before NPA, your pension will be enhanced by 25% of your prospective service to NPA.
Tier 3
If you are certified as being permanently incapable of doing your job but are likely to be able to undertake gainful employment within three years, you will get a pension based on the amount of service you have accrued but with no enhancement for a fixed period of three years. If you secure gainful employment your pension will be stopped.
If after 18 months you have not secured gainful employment, your employer will have to review your situation and seek a further medical assessment to determine whether or not you are likely to be capable of undertaking gainful employment by the end of the three years. Following this, it is possible you will be awarded a tier 2 pension if your employer decides, in hindsight and as a result of the review and at their discretion, that a tier 2 pension would have been more appropriate. Otherwise your pension will cease at the end of the three-year period.
Death and survivor benefits
Death in service
If you die in pensionable service, a lump sum payment of three times your annual salary is payable (whether or not you are taking the 50/50 option). This will be based on actual earnings for part-time staff, rather than the equivalent full-time salary. You should make a nomination for the recipient(s) of this grant, although the regional fund has ultimate discretion over payment.
A pension will also be payable to your spouse, civil partner or cohabiting partner and any eligible dependent children. The pension payable to a spouse, civil partner or cohabiting partner will be 1/160 of your final pensionable salary for each year of pensionable service. This means 50 per cent of any pension built up before April 2008, 37.5 per cent of pension built up between April 2008 and April 2014 and 30.625 per cent of pension built up in the career average scheme.
A pension for a cohabiting partner is only in respect of service from 6 April 1988. You must have been a contributing member on or after 1 April 2008. Co-habiting partners must have been in relationship for two years and be ‘financially interdependent’ at time of death. There is no requirement to nominate a partner but members can inform their local LGPS pension fund in advance.
Pensions for children will be payable to children in full-time education up to the age of 23, with the amount depending on the number of children and whether or not a spouse, civil partner or cohabiting partner’s pension is also payable. If you have more than one eligible child, your pension fund administrator will decide how to share the children’s pension between them.
Death in deferment
If you were to die after you left pensionable service, but before accessing your pension benefits, a lump sum would be payable to a nominated person or persons or to your estate, as above.
This lump sum would be calculated as being five times the pension that would have been payable to you, had you retired at the date of death. This is a tax-free payment under current legislation, though there are plans to make it taxable for inheritance tax purposes. Survivor pensions would also be payable as above.
Death after retirement
If you were to die within 10 years of retirement and before 75, a lump sum of 10 times your pension at date of death, less the pension already paid, would be payable. This is currently a tax-free payment. Survivor pensions would also be payable, as above.