Can you retire at 56 with £800k?
On track On our model, a 56-year-old retiring today with a £800,000 pot could draw a sustainable income of about £38,000 a year (£3,170 a month) in today’s money, holding that spending power the whole way to age 95. That’s above the £31,300 the PLSA reckons a single person needs for a ‘moderate’ retirement — about £6,700 a year to spare. Either way you’d be bridging 11 years on your own savings before the State Pension starts at 67.
What the projection shows
The £38,000 a year this supports clears the moderate benchmark by about £6,700. It’s a workable moderate retirement, but the margin is thin enough that a poor run of early returns would eat into it — worth stress-testing before you commit.
For the 11 years between finishing work at 56 and the State Pension arriving at 67, every penny of income comes from your own pots. That first year the tax bill is modest — around £3,700 on £41,700 of gross withdrawals, an effective rate of about 9% — because a quarter of each SIPP withdrawal is tax-free and the taxable slice mostly sits in the basic-rate band.
From 67 the full new State Pension — about £11,502 a year in today’s money, and triple-locked so it broadly keeps pace with prices — covers roughly 30% of your £38,000 target on its own. From that point your pots only have to find the rest, so they stretch a good deal further than they do in the bridge years before it starts.
The plan is designed to run the pots down to roughly zero by age 95: both the £560,000 SIPP and the £240,000 ISA are put to work rather than left as a large estate. If leaving something behind matters to you, you’d take a little less each year.
Each extra £100k of pot at this age adds roughly £3,400 a year to the sustainable income, so there’s a clear payoff to arriving with a little more — or, equally, room to retire slightly earlier if you’d trade income for time.
Questions people ask
Can I retire at 56 with £800,000?
Yes, on our model. A £800,000 pot at 56 supports a sustainable income of about £38,000 a year (£3,170 a month) in today’s money, held to age 95. That’s above the £31,300 the PLSA links to a moderate single-person retirement, by roughly £6,700 a year.
How much income would £800k give me at 56?
Around £38,000 a year, or £3,170 a month, net and in today’s money — the most the pot can pay out while still lasting to age 95 on the assumptions below. The figure is split £560,000 in a SIPP and £240,000 in an ISA.
What happens when the State Pension starts?
You’d fund the first 11 years entirely from your pots, then from age 67 the full new State Pension — about £11,502 a year in today’s money — begins and takes much of the pressure off your savings for the rest of the plan.
Run your own numbers
This page uses one fixed set of assumptions. Your real plan has your pots, your State Pension record, DB pensions, rental income and one-off events. See it modelled year by year with a free annual check-up.
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