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Only 420 pay packets to go – and all I'll get is a £3,000-a-year pension

A thirty-year- old man planning to retire at 65 will only pick up his pay packet another 420 times before downing tools for good, analysis from Virgin Money shows.

And even if he contributes £100 every month towards his pension until then, he can expect just over the equivalent of £3,000 a year in annual income in today’s money once he retires – even assuming his savings grow by a decent seven per cent each year.

That’s the shocking outcome of Virgin Money’s Pensioner Profile Analysis, which tracks how a regular £100 pension contribution will mature once you retire. The figures show that people with low pension contributions will struggle in later life as the money they set aside will have less value in the future compared to now. 

The company says that even a 20-year-old woman who saves £100 a month from now until she retires at 65 will only have set aside enough for an annual pension worth £12,700 in the year 2053. And according to Virgin Money, this sum would only be worth a paltry £4,190 in today’s money due to inflation.

However the same woman could benefit from an income of as much as £29,300 a year in real terms if she decided to increase her regular payments by 10 per cent a year1. Virgin Money’s calculations show that saving just a small amount more could dramatically affect your income in retirement.

Scott Mowbray of Virgin Money said: “Thinking about your pension in terms of how many pay packets you’ve got left before quitting work concentrates the mind.

“Saving for retirement is not a sexy subject and thinking ahead thirty years is very often low on a list of priorities. This explains why so many of us do not pay it much attention. However our analysis proves that paying attention is critical.

“A ten per cent increase in your yearly contributions will dramatically affect the quality of life you can expect when you retire. It may seem a long way off but acting now is the only way to make the difference in the future.

“It’s a strange conundrum and many people won’t want to sacrifice ten per cent extra when they could be spending that now, but it really is worth it.”

The Virgin Money research shows that a 20 year old man increasing his regular payments by 10% a year1 for the next 45 years could increase their eventual retirement income by 600%. In real terms, that’s the difference between an income of £4,630 a year or £32,500 a year.

Virgin Money Pensioner Profile Analysis

Assumes Male Retiring at 65
Saving £100 pm
Starting AgeNo. of pay packets Savings PotAnnual income in today’s money
20540£323,000£4,630
25480£235,000£3,840
30420£170,000£3,150
35360£120,000£2,550
40300£84,100£2,020
45240£56,500£1,550
Assume 10% increase in contributions
20540£2,260,000£32,500
25480£1,340,000£21,800
30420£783,000£14,500
35;360£449,000£9,490
40300£251,000£6,040
45240£135,000£3,710

- Ends -

Notes to editors:

Assumptions 

  • The figures show what you could receive if you retire in 2053 and your savings grow by 7% a year. These figures are only examples and are not guaranteed. They are not minimum or maximum amounts. What you get back depends on how your savings grow and on the tax treatment of the funds and your own tax position. You could get back more or less than this. All pension companies use the same rates of growth for illustrations, but their charges vary. The figures shown are based on Virgin Money's actual charges.
  • All pension companies use the same rates to work out the annual income you could expect from your plan when you retire. The actual income you receive depends on how your savings grow and interest rates at the time you retire.
  • 1 If you increase your regular payments by 10% a year, your final payment will be £ 7,289.05.
  • The figures include the tax relief you get for saving into a pension based on the current tax rate of 20%.
  • We've assumed you use all your savings to provide an income.   

For further information
Scott Mowbray at the Virgin Money Press Office
Scott.mowbray@virginmoney.com - 01603 215909

Kevan Reilly/Billy Partridge/Holly Clark, Citigate Dewe Rogerson
Firstname.lastname@citigatedr.co.uk - 0207 638 9571

About Virgin Money
Virgin Money is Virgin’s financial services arm and was established in 1995.

Virgin Money has over two million customers and offers a wide range of financial products across lending (e.g. credit cards and personal loans), savings (e.g. deposits, investments and pensions) and protection (e.g. life insurance, home insurance and car insurance) to the UK market.



The Virgin Stakeholder Pension, Virgin Unit Trust and Virgin PEP are provided by Virgin Money Unit Trust Managers Ltd which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. Registered office: Discovery House, Whiting Road, Norwich, NR4 6EJ. Registered in England no. 3000482. Entered on the Financial Services Authority’s Register (www.fsa.gov.uk/register/), Register Number: 171748.