The pension Lifetime Allowance (LTA) was abolished in April 2024 and no longer exists as a hard cap on pension savings. It has been replaced by the Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) of £268,275 — the maximum tax-free cash you can take from pensions in your lifetime — and the Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA) of £1,073,100. The vast majority of UK pension savers are unaffected by these new limits. Those who held LTA protections before 2024 should take specialist advice on how the transition affects their position.
The Lifetime Allowance was one of the most complex and controversial features of UK pension tax law for over two decades. Its abolition in April 2024 was broadly welcomed — though the replacement framework has its own nuances that matter for those with larger pension pots.
What the LTA Was
The Lifetime Allowance set a ceiling — originally £1,800,000 at its peak, then reduced repeatedly to £1,073,100 — on the total pension savings that could benefit from tax relief. Exceeding it at the point of taking benefits triggered a tax charge of 25% (on income) or 55% (on lump sums). It particularly affected senior professionals, NHS doctors, and members of generous defined benefit schemes.
What Replaced It
From April 2024, two new allowances replaced the LTA:
- Lump Sum Allowance (LSA): £268,275. The maximum tax-free cash you can take from all pensions combined during your lifetime. This is 25% of the old LTA. Lump sums above this are taxed as income at your marginal rate.
- Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance (LSDBA): £1,073,100. The combined limit on all lump sums taken in life and paid to beneficiaries on death that can be tax-free.
Pension pots themselves can now be unlimited — the new allowances cap tax-free cash, not total savings.
Who Is Affected
The new allowances affect very few ordinary pension savers. To exhaust the £268,275 LSA on tax-free cash, you'd need a total pension pot large enough that 25% equals £268,275 — meaning roughly £1,073,100 in total pension savings. This is a high threshold that most UK workers won't approach.
The groups who need to think carefully:
- Those with larger defined benefit pension entitlements from long public sector or professional careers
- Higher earners who have maximised pension contributions over many years
- Anyone who held LTA protections before 2024 (Enhanced Protection, Fixed Protection, Individual Protection) — these interact with the new allowances in complex ways requiring specialist advice
What Changed for Most People
Nothing — the new rules are more favourable than the old for the vast majority of pension savers. The hard cap on total pension savings is gone. Contributions can continue growing beyond the old £1,073,100 LTA without triggering a tax charge simply for accumulating too much.
For how pension allowances fit within a broader retirement income strategy, our guide on planning retirement income from pensions, ISAs, and State Pension covers the coordination of multiple income sources.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to worry about pension taxes now the LTA is gone?
For most savers, no. Income tax applies to pension withdrawals above the tax-free cash (same as always). The annual allowance (£60,000/year) limits how much can be contributed with tax relief. The new lump sum allowances only affect those with very large pots.
What if I have old LTA protections?
Enhanced Protection and Fixed Protection can still affect how much tax-free cash you can take — they're mapped onto the new allowances. This is genuinely complex; specialist independent financial advice is strongly recommended if you hold any form of protection.
For the HMRC technical detail on the new pension allowances, visit HMRC's pension tax manual.
