If there are five or more employees where you work, your employer is normally required to offer you the chance to join a pension scheme. They must provide access to a stakeholder pension unless they offer either an occupational or an alternative suitable personal pension scheme.
If you earn more than the National Insurance lower earnings limit (£90 a week in the 2008-2009 tax year and £95 for tax year 2009-2010) and there are five or more employees where you work, your employer must normally offer you access to a stakeholder pension unless:
A stakeholder pension is a type of personal pension which meets standards set by the government.
For instance, stakeholder pensions must offer:
If your employer is obliged to offer you access to a stakeholder pension you must be able to pay into your stakeholder pension directly from your wages through the company's pay system.
Your employer is not obliged to pay anything into your stakeholder pension themselves or to pay any administration charges charged by your stakeholder pension provider.
Companies' obligations to provide access to stakeholder pensions are regulated by The Pensions Regulator and you can find out more information on its website or from the helpline 0870 6063636 (9.00 am to 5.00 pm, Monday to Friday).
If your employer offers you an alternative personal pension instead of a stakeholder pension, its terms must meet minimum standards set by the government.
Your employer is obliged to contribute the equivalent of at least three per cent of your salary if they are offering it as an alternative to a stakeholder pension. But they don't have to pay the administration costs of your pension scheme.
If you leave your employer, or transfer your money out of the pension scheme to another scheme, you don't lose the money they have contributed.
Your employer may arrange for a pension provider to set up a personal pension arrangement through the workplace. A personal pension arranged in this way is called a ‘Group Personal Pension Plan’ (GPPP).
A GPPP is a type of personal pension where your employer chooses the financial provider on your behalf.
There can be some advantages to contributing to a GPPP arranged by your employer:
You are likely to lose some of these benefits if you leave your employer. For instance, they are unlikely to make any further contributions to your pension and you may have to pay higher administration costs to the pension provider.
You can ask The Pensions Advisory Service for information and advice on personal and company pension schemes.
Helplines 0845 6012923 (Monday to Friday 9.00 am to 5.00 pm)