High earner navigating pension limitations? Plan for increasing retirement costs.

Retirement costs now exceed £60,000
The cost of achieving a comfortable retirement lifestyle has climbed above £60,000 per year for the first time, according to the latest data from the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) – a figure that should prompt serious reflection among high-earning professionals who face constraints in how they can save for the future.
The 2025 Retirement Living Standards reveal that maintaining a lifestyle in retirement that includes regular dining out, a well-maintained car, generous gifting, and a two-week Mediterranean holiday will now cost couples £60,600 annually, and £43,900 for single individuals – with no housing costs included.1
While these figures may not seem daunting to those earning six or seven figures, the real challenge lies in how such individuals can structure their wealth to generate that income without relying on traditional pensions, especially when the annual allowance is tapered – in some cases down to just £10,000 per year. Business owners and self-employed Partners, too, often overlook the need to save sufficiently for retirement in place of defined contribution pensions.
1 Pension and Lifetime Savings Association Retirement Living Standards Report, June 2025
High income can limit your options
For senior professionals whose total earnings exceed £260,000 (and adjusted income over £360,000), the tapered pension annual allowance significantly reduces the capacity for tax-advantaged pension contributions. As a result, many are either not contributing at all or relying solely on employer contributions, often deferring proactive retirement planning for another day.
However, the figures from the PLSA make clear: deferring action comes at a cost. To replicate a £60,000 per year income in retirement (before tax and assuming full state pension entitlement), individuals still need personal assets in the region of £900,000 per couple – more if retirement is early, spending is considerable, or if higher inflation persists.1
“These aren’t aspirational figures plucked from the air,” says Zoe Alexander of the PLSA. “They reflect the reality of the lifestyle many professionals want – whether they’ve planned for it or not.”
Beyond pensions: Alternative choices
With limited pension allowances, high earners must turn to alternative vehicles to build tax-efficient retirement savings for future income streams.
A couple’s combined £40,000 a year ISA allowances (£20,000 per adult) offer an initial opportunity. Offshore Bonds could also be used to potentially defer tax liabilities (currency movements may affect the value of investments).
For business owners, consider extracting value from the enterprise itself or building diversified portfolios via corporate structures.
An expert financial adviser can help recommend more sophisticated solutions depending upon your individual circumstances.
The silent risk: Lifestyle creep
The greatest risk facing many high-income households isn’t low income – it’s lifestyle inflation. Private school fees, multiple mortgages, and elevated living costs often leave little room for accumulating diversified wealth in investments outside of pensions. Yet the assumption that income will convert automatically to retirement security is, in many cases, misplaced.
According to Scottish Widows, 20% of defined contribution pension savers are still on track for poverty in retirement, and 3.5 million people will carry some housing costs well into their later years – averaging £10,600 annually.2
For those navigating restricted pension allowances, the challenge isn’t saving more, but saving differently. This means a deliberate, tax-aware approach to building non-pension income sources – whether through investment choices, business liquidity events, or structured drawdown strategies.
For many, engaging with an expert financial adviser earlier – before the taper bites or entrepreneurial liquidity arrives – can make the difference between a retirement that reflects years of work and one that feels compromised.
Bottom Line for High Earners: Your income buys you lifestyle today. It’s your wealth structure that will deliver it in retirement. The two are not the same – and time, as always, is your most valuable asset.
2 Scottish Widows’ Annual Retirement Report, May 2025
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The levels and bases of taxation, and reliefs from taxation, can change at any time. The value of any tax relief is dependent on individual circumstances.
SJP Approved 06/06/2025