For many years, age 55 has been seen as a milestone in UK retirement planning. It marked the point at which defined contribution pensions could generally be accessed under pension freedoms.
That milestone is changing.
From April 2028, the Normal Minimum Pension Age will increase from 55 to 57. While this may seem like a small adjustment, it could have meaningful implications for expatriates who are planning early retirement or structuring cross border income strategies.
Understanding how the change works, and whether any protections apply to you, is essential.
What Is Changing and When
The Normal Minimum Pension Age is the earliest age at which most individuals can access their defined contribution pension benefits without incurring unauthorised payment tax charges.
From 6 April 2028, this minimum age will rise from 55 to 57.
This aligns pension access approximately ten years before State Pension age, which itself is scheduled to rise.
For those currently in their mid to late forties or early fifties, this change may directly affect retirement timelines.
Why the Government Is Increasing the Age
The policy objective is linked to longevity.
As life expectancy has increased, the government has sought to ensure that pension savings support longer retirements. Raising the minimum access age is designed to discourage early depletion of retirement funds and maintain alignment with State Pension age.
For domestic retirees, this primarily affects early retirement modelling.
For expatriates, the consequences can be more complex.
Protected Pension Ages Explained
Not everyone will be affected equally.
Some pension schemes contain what is known as a protected pension age. If certain conditions were met before the legislation changed, members may retain the right to access benefits at age 55.
These protections are technical and scheme specific. Transferring pensions can in some cases remove protected status if not handled correctly.
For internationally mobile individuals considering consolidation or overseas transfers, understanding whether a protected age applies is critical before making structural changes.
Losing protected access unintentionally can alter retirement timing significantly.
How This Affects Expats Living Abroad
For expatriates, pension access age interacts with residency and tax planning.
If you are planning to relocate to a lower tax jurisdiction and begin drawing pension income at 55, the increase to 57 may disrupt that strategy.
The timing of residency changes, asset sales and pension crystallisation may need to be reconsidered.
In addition, some overseas pension schemes may have different access rules. If you are holding both UK and non UK pension arrangements, coordination becomes important.
Cross border retirement plans built around age 55 may now require reassessment.
Early Retirement Planning Across Borders
Early retirement for expatriates typically involves:
Sequencing pension withdrawals
Managing double taxation agreements
Balancing currency exposure
Coordinating with business exit proceeds
Integrating investment income
A two year delay in pension access can require interim funding from other assets.
For high net worth individuals, this may not prevent retirement, but it can alter withdrawal sequencing and tax modelling.
For those closer to the margin of affordability, the difference between 55 and 57 may materially affect retirement viability.
Planning well in advance allows for adjustments such as increased contributions before departure or restructuring investment portfolios to bridge any access gap.
Conclusion
The increase in the Normal Minimum Pension Age from 55 to 57 is more than a technical adjustment. For expatriates, it can affect retirement timing, tax planning and cross border income strategy.
Those in their forties and early fifties should review their plans now, particularly if early retirement or relocation is part of the strategy.
If you would like clarity on how the pension access age change affects retirement timeline and cross border planning, you can press the link below to arrange a consultation. Any discussion will be exploratory in nature and focused on understanding your circumstances before determining whether regulated advice is appropriate.




