New DWP figures reveal ‘shocking’ state of under-saving for retirement

Existing figures assume that the state pension ‘triple lock’ remains in place for the next fifty years.

Related topics:  Pension,  Triple lock
Rozi Jones | Editor, Financial Reporter
20th November 2025
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A Freedom of Information request by former pensions minister Steve Webb has unearthed previously unpublished DWP estimates of the scale of under-saving for retirement in the UK.

Existing DWP figures suggest that around 14.6m people are set to face a sharp drop in their standard of living when they stop work.

But these figures assume that the state pension ‘triple lock’ remains in place for the next fifty years.

The FOI reveals that DWP has also run similar projections but on the basis that the state pension either a) is linked in future to the growth in average earnings or b) is linked simply to inflation, as was the policy prior to the introduction of the triple lock.

Under both of these alternative assumptions, millions more people of working age can be expected to face a disappointing retirement.

Rather than 14.6m (43%) of people of working age facing a sharp drop in their standard of living on retirement, dropping the triple lock would lead to 19.0m (56%) facing such a drop if the pension was linked to earnings and 26.1m (77%) if it was linked to inflation.

The numbers failing to meet even the Pensions UK minimum threshold would rise sharply if the triple lock were to go; an earnings link in future would see an extra 1.4m failing to reach this minimum threshold, whilst a price link would see more than 7m extra pensioners likely to retire below this basic standard.

The numbers set to miss out on a ‘moderate’ standard of living are already very high with 25.4m or 73% set to fall short; weakening the uprating of the state pension would add up to 3.4m more to the number falling short.

These numbers not only inform the debate about the future of the triple lock but also the forthcoming Budget, where it is widely rumoured that the Chancellor will raise up to £2 billion by cutting back on workplace ‘salary sacrifice’ schemes for pensions. 

Steve Webb, partner at pension consultants LCP, said: “These shocking figures reveal that the true state of under-saving for retirement in Britain is far greater than has previously been admitted. Very few people expect the triple lock to continue for another fifty years, yet this is the basis on which the government has so far published estimates. 

"If the triple lock were to be replaced by an earnings link, millions more people would face a sharp drop in their standard of living when they retire. And a prices link, as was the policy until 2010, would see around 1 in 3 of today’s workers set to retire short of even a bare ‘minimum’ standard of living. 

"Against this backdrop, the Chancellor should be taking measures in the Budget to boost pension saving, not undermine it.”

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