£1,500/month Pension from Age 48
Retirement at 65 · 17 years · UK pension projection
Projected pension pot at 65 — £1,500/month from Age 48
| Growth assumption | Pot at age 65 | Annual income (4% drawdown) | Monthly income |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative (4%/yr) | £437,241 | £17,490 | £1,458 |
| Moderate (6%/yr) | £529,847 | £21,194 | £1,766 |
| Optimistic (8%/yr) | £647,696 | £25,908 | £2,159 |
| Total you contribute | £306,000 | over 17 years | |
How your pot grows — £1,500/month at 6% annual growth
| Age | Years saving | Projected pot (6%) | Contributed so far |
|---|---|---|---|
| 53 | 5 | £104,655 | £90,000 |
| 58 | 10 | £245,819 | £180,000 |
| 63 | 15 | £436,228 | £270,000 |
Figures are future nominal values. Assumes £1,500/month contributed consistently with monthly compounding at 6% annual growth. Does not include employer contributions or inflation adjustment.
State Pension supplement
The full new State Pension in 2025-26 is £11,502/year (£958/month) for those with 35 qualifying NI years. Add this to your private pension income to estimate total retirement income. At 6% growth, your private pension adds £1,766/month — giving a combined £2,724/month if you qualify for the full State Pension.
Frequently asked questions
How much will I have in my pension if I save £1,500/month from age 48?
If you save £1,500/month from age 48 to age 65 (17 years), your projected pension pot is £437,241 at 4% annual growth, £529,847 at 6%, or £647,696 at 8%. You will have contributed £306,000 in total; the rest is investment growth.
What income will £529,847 in a pension provide?
Using the 4% sustainable withdrawal rate — a common rule of thumb — £529,847 provides approximately £21,194/year (£1,766/month) in retirement income. This does not include the State Pension (currently £11,502/year full new State Pension in 2025-26), which would supplement your private pension income.
Is £1,500/month enough for a pension?
The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association defines a 'moderate' retirement standard as around £31,300/year for a single person. To assess whether £1,500/month is enough, compare your projected income of £1,766/month to your expected retirement expenses, factoring in the State Pension and any other income sources.
How does employer matching affect my pension at £1,500/month?
The projections above show personal contributions only. If your employer matches contributions — typically 3–6% of salary — your total monthly pension saving could be significantly higher. For auto-enrolment, the minimum total is 8% of qualifying earnings (3% employer + 5% employee). Adding your employer contribution to £1,500/month will increase your final pot proportionally.
What is the pension annual allowance and does saving £1,500/month affect it?
The annual allowance for pension contributions is £60,000 (2025-26), covering your own contributions plus employer contributions plus tax relief. At £1,500/month, your annual personal contribution is £306,000 over 17 years — meaning each year you contribute £18,000. This is well within the annual allowance for most people. Higher earners (adjusted income over £260,000) may face a tapered annual allowance down to £10,000.
How does inflation affect my £529,847 projected pension pot?
The £529,847 projection at 6% annual growth is in nominal (future) terms. After accounting for typical inflation of 2–3% per year, the real purchasing power is lower — roughly equivalent to £348,213 in today's money over 17 years. Many financial planners use a real growth rate (nominal growth minus inflation) of 3–4% for pension forecasting. Your monthly income estimate of £1,766/month should be viewed in future prices; at 2.5% inflation, today's equivalent is around £1,161/month.