Qualifying conditions for the Basic State Pension
Currently, to qualify for the full Basic
State Pension (BSP), a man needs 44qualifying
years and a woman needs 39.
For those reaching State
Pension Age (SPA) on or after
6 April 2010, the number of qualifying years needed to qualify for a full
BSP will be reduced to 30 for both men and women. A person with less than
30 qualifying years will be entitled to a proportion of the full BSP for
each qualifying year they have built up.
Click here to read more about the BSP.
Claiming a Category B pension
A Category B pension is paid by virtue of a spouse's or civil
partner's qualifying years
and earnings. Currently, on reaching their SPA, a person cannot claim a
Category B pension until their spouse has claimed their own pension.
This restriction will be removed with effect from 6 April 2010. As a
result, where one member of a married couple or civil partnership has
deferred his or her pension and the other member has reached pension age,
the other member will be able to claim their Category B pension.
Home Responsibilities Protection entitlement
Home Responsibilities (HRP) will
be replaced by a new system of weekly contribution credits from 6 April 2010
for foster carers, people caring for one or more severely disabled persons
for 20 hours a week or more or getting Child Benefit for a child under 12
years of age.
For those reaching SPA on
or after 6 April 2010, each complete year (up to a maximum of 22) of HRP
awarded under the existing rules will be converted into a qualifying year
for the BSP.
Converting years of HRP can also be used for up to half the working life to
help satisfy the condition for bereavement benefits.
Click here to read more about HRP.
Uprating of the State Pension
Subject to affordability and the fiscal position in 2012, but in any event
at the latest by the end of the next Parliament, the basic state pension
will be uprated annually in line with average earnings rather than prices.
Eligibility for the State Second Pension
The State
Second Pension (S2P) provides
an additional
state pension for:
-
those with earnings at or above the annual National Insurance lower
earnings limit (£4,940 in 2009/10); and
-
qualifying carers and certain long term sick or disabled people who, for
the purposes of calculating the benefit, are deemed to be earning at the
low earnings threshold (£13,900 in 2009/10).
Employees with earnings between the annual lower earnings limit and the low
earnings threshold are treated as having earnings at the threshold for S2P
purposes.
From 6 April 2010 access will be extended to foster parents, people awarded
child benefit for a child under age 12; people looking after someone with a
qualifying disability for at least 20 hours a week. They will be deemed to
be earning at the low earnings threshold, for S2P purposes. Additionally,
people will be able to combine earnings with credits for caring and/or
incapacity within a single tax year in order to build up S2P entitlement.
Restructure of S2P
The rules for the additional State Pension are changing. In the future it
will become a simple, single rate, weekly top-up to the basic State Pension.
For people earning £4,940 or more a year or getting credits for State Second
Pension, it will start to build up at a flat rate of around £1.60 a week
(both figures in 2009/10 money) for each qualifying year. The exact date
from which this will start has yet to be fixed, but it is expected to be
between 2012 and 2015.
The current earnings-related element built up by people earning between
£13,900 and £43,888 a year (in 2009/10) will be gradually withdrawn, so that
people will build up entitlement on a completely flat-rate basis by around
2030 or shortly afterwards. These changes to additional State Pension are
intended to make it easier for you to understand how your State Pension is
worked out and estimate how much you will receive.
Increase to the State Pension Age (SPA)
The State Pension is payable from your State Pension Age (SPA).
Currently, the SPA for men is 65 and for women is 60.
The government has introduced changes to SPAs:
-
Between 2010 and 2020, the SPA for women will increase to 65 to ensure
equality. Women born between 6 April 1950 and 5 April 1955 are affected
by this change.
-
Between 2024 and 2026, 2034 and 2036 and 2044 and 2046, the SPA for both
men and women will rise to 66, 67 and 68, respectively. Those born after
6 April 1959 are affected by these changes.