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GeraCash / Pension & Retirement Calculator / Age 28, £60,000, 8%

Age 28, £60,000: UK Pension Projection (8% contribution)

Projected pension pot, annual retirement income and Gera Retirement Readiness Score for a 28-year-old earning £60,000 with 8% total pension contributions — 2025–26 DWP rates.

How much pension will a 28-year-old on £60,000 get with 8% contributions?

A 28-year-old earning £60,000 and contributing 8% of qualifying earnings will accumulate a pension pot of £284,313 by age 67, yielding total annual retirement income of £30,927 (including state pension of £230.25/week) — a Gera Retirement Readiness Score of 74/100. Based on DWP 2025–26 published rates (OGL v3.0).

Source:DWP Benefit and Pension Rates 2025–26 + GOV.UK auto-enrolment rates·as of 2025–26updated annually (last: )
Gera Retirement Readiness Score74 / 100£60,000, age 28, 8% contributions (2025–26 — DWP OGL v3.0)How this index is calculated
GRRS 74/100 — Good readiness (26% below target)
Reference rates: 2025–26· DWP & ONS · Open Government Licence v3.0 · Updated annually

Full pension projection breakdown

Pension projection: age 28, £60,000, 8% total contributions (2025–26)
ItemValueNotes
Current age2839 years to retirement at 67
Gross salary£60,000Annual gross earnings
Total contribution rate8%Employer 3% + employee 5% (minimum)
Qualifying earnings£44,030Salary capped to £6,240–£50,270 band
Annual pension contribution£3,522Qualifying earnings × 8%
Projected pot at 67£284,3134% real growth p.a. × 39 yr (DWP assumption)
Annual drawdown£18,954Pot ÷ 15 years (level drawdown)
State pension£11,973£230.25/week × 52 — DWP 2025–26
Total annual retirement income£30,927Drawdown + state pension
Target retirement income£42,00070% of gross (DWP standard benchmark)
GRRS74 / 100Good — projected ÷ target × 100

Computed from DWP 2025–26 published state pension and auto-enrolment rates. Growth rate 4% real p.a. = DWP official modelling assumption (CPI-adjusted). Level drawdown over 15 years. No salary growth assumed (conservative baseline). OGL v3.0.

Compare contribution rates at £60,000, age 28

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Must be under 67

Annual gross earnings

Employer + employee combined

74/100

Gera Retirement Readiness Score: 74/100

Good readiness

26% below the 70%-replacement target

Projected pot at 67

£284,313

£3,522/yr × 39 yr at 4% real

Annual retirement income

£30,927/yr

£18,954 drawdown + £11,973 state pension

Target income (70% of salary)

£42,000/yr

DWP replacement-rate benchmark

Annual contribution

£3,522/yr

£44,030 qualifying earnings × 8%

Rates used (published, OGL v3.0): State pension £230.25/week (DWP 2025–26) · QE band £6,240–£50,270 · Growth 4% real p.a. (DWP) · Drawdown 15 yr (ONS life expectancy)

This projection uses published DWP and ONS rates. It is not regulated financial advice. Actual outcomes depend on fund performance, contribution history and future rate changes. For personalised advice consult an FCA-authorised financial adviser.

Frequently asked questions

How much will I have in my pension at 28 if I earn £60,000?
Contributing 8% of qualifying earnings (salary between £6,240 and £50,270), your qualifying earnings are £44,030/yr, giving an annual contribution of £3,522. At a 4% real annual growth rate (DWP modelling assumption) over 39 years, this projects to £284,313 at age 67. Source: DWP/GOV.UK OGL v3.0.
What annual income does a £284,313 pension pot provide?
Divided over 15 years (level drawdown), the projected pot yields £18,954/yr. Adding the 2025–26 full state pension of £11,973/yr, total projected retirement income is £30,927/yr.
What is a Gera Retirement Readiness Score (GRRS) of 74/100?
GRRS 74/100 means your projected retirement income is 74% of the 70%-replacement target of £42,000/yr (70% of your £60,000 gross). Band: Good. Your projected income is on track but a slightly higher contribution would close the gap.
How would increasing contributions improve my GRRS at £60,000?
At £60,000 and age 28: 8% → GRRS 74/100; 12% → GRRS 96/100 (pot £426,550); 15% → GRRS 100/100 (pot £533,188). Computed from DWP/ONS published rates (OGL v3.0).
When can I claim the state pension?
State Pension age is currently 67 for both men and women born after 5 April 1960. You need at least 35 qualifying National Insurance years for the full new state pension of £230.25/week (2025–26). The minimum is 10 qualifying years for a partial payment. Source: DWP (gov.uk, OGL v3.0).

Other salaries at age 28 (8%)

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Sources

Contains public sector information published by Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: DWP — Benefit and pension rates 2025 to 2026 (2025–26, published April 2025).

Contains public sector information published by Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: GOV.UK — Workplace pensions: what you, your employer and the government pay (April 2019 onwards (current), published April 2019).

Projections computed by Gera from published DWP and ONS rates. Full formula: GRRS methodology.