How much pension should you have at 30?
The median UK pension pot at age 30 is around £13,000. But is that enough? It depends on the retirement you want. Here are the numbers for all three PLSA living standards — and what you can do if there's a gap.
The median tells you where most people are. Our retirement readiness calculator tells you where you are.
Check your scoreYour early thirties are often when earnings start to climb — promotions, job moves, or specialisation. This is the window where increasing your pension contribution rate (not just the amount) has the biggest long-term impact, because each pay rise compounds for decades.
At 30, many people are balancing competing priorities: saving for a house, starting a family, or paying off student loans. Pensions can feel like a low priority. But the maths is unforgiving: every year you delay is a year of lost compounding that you can never fully recover.
A useful rule of thumb: halve your age when you first start contributing seriously, and save that percentage of your salary. If you started at 30, aim for 15% (including employer contributions). If you started at 22, 11% is your target.
- •Median pot figures are illustrative estimates derived from ONS Wealth and Assets Survey data. Your actual pot depends on your contribution history, employer match, fund choice, and fees.
- •Target pots use the PLSA Retirement Living Standards (2024/25 single-person figures) and assume full state pension from age 67, with retirement lasting to age 87.
- •Projections use 5% nominal growth and 0.75% annual fees. Actual returns will vary. Figures are in nominal terms and do not account for inflation.
- •Being above or below the median says nothing about whether you personally are on track — it depends on your target lifestyle, other savings, property wealth, and state pension entitlement.
- •This is general information, not personal financial advice. For personalised guidance, speak to an FCA-regulated financial adviser.
This calculator provides estimates based on 2025/26 tax rates and is not financial advice. Scottish taxpayers are subject to different income tax rates and bands. The calculations assume your salary is your only source of income and do not account for benefits in kind or other taxable income.
For personalised guidance on your pension contributions, speak to an FCA-regulated financial adviser. You can find one via Unbiased or VouchedFor.