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Annual allowance

Pension Carry-Forward and the Tapered Annual Allowance

7 min read. Last verified 22 June 2026. 2026/27 rules.

The short answer

The standard pension annual allowance is £60,000 for 2026/27, but it tapers down to a £10,000 floor if your threshold income exceeds £200,000 and adjusted income exceeds £260,000. Unused allowance from the previous three tax years can be carried forward to fill the gap.

Key facts

The annual allowance is the most you can put into a pension each year with tax relief: £60,000 for 2026/27, including employer contributions. Two rules change the real figure for high earners.

The taper

If your threshold income is over £200,000 and your adjusted income is over £260,000, the allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 of adjusted income above £260,000, down to a floor of £10,000. Both tests must be met for the taper to apply.

Carry-forward

Unused allowance from the previous three tax years can be added to this year's, as long as you were a member of a pension scheme in those years. You use the current year's allowance first, then the oldest unused year.

Common questions

Who is affected by the annual allowance taper?
Only those with threshold income over £200,000 AND adjusted income over £260,000. Both tests must be met; meeting only one does not trigger the taper.
How far back can I carry forward unused allowance?
Up to three previous tax years, using the current year's allowance first and then the oldest unused year, provided you were a member of a registered pension scheme in the years you are carrying forward from.

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Sources

Figures verified against gov.uk and gov.scot on 30 June 2026. Constants version 2026/27.3. 2026/27 tax year. This is a modelling tool for general insight, not financial or tax advice.

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