Updated April 2026 — 6-Tier Restructure · Employer 23.7% · All 4 Nations · Opt-Out Comparison
NHS Pension Calculator 2026/27:
Employee and Employer Contributions

The NHS Pension Scheme is one of the best in the country. You contribute between 5.2% and 12.5% of your pay depending on your salary. But did you know your employer adds 23.7% on top of that, or 22.5% in Scotland and 23.2% in Northern Ireland? Most people never see that number. This calculator shows you both sides: what you pay, what your trust pays, and what you actually lose if you opt out.

Employee contribution: 5.2% to 12.5% (6 tiers England/Wales, updated April 2026)
Scotland: 9 separate tiers (5.7%–12.7%), correctly applied
Northern Ireland: 6 tiers with different rates to England
Employer contribution: 23.7% England/Wales · 22.5% Scotland · 23.2% NI
HCAS (London weighting) correctly included in pensionable pay
Overtime correctly included in pensionable pay (NHSBSA confirmed)
Opt-out comparison: see what you gain vs what you actually lose
Part-time pro-rata: pension tier based on actual pro-rata pay
5.2%–12.5%
Employee Rate (Eng/Wales)
23.7%
Employer Rate (Eng/Wales)
6
Tiers from Apr 2026
DB
Defined Benefit Scheme
NHS Pension Calculator 2026/27

Select your region, band, and hours. See your employee contribution, employer contribution, total pension, and opt-out comparison in one view.

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Employer contribution shown: Most calculators hide the 23.7% employer contribution. This calculator shows both sides so you can see the full picture.
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Opt-out comparison: Opting out gains you your employee contribution but loses three times that in employer contributions. The calculator shows your exact net position.
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Region matters: Scotland uses 9 tiers and 22.5% employer. NI uses 6 tiers with slightly higher employee rates and 23.2% employer. Select correctly.
Part-time: Your tier is based on actual pro-rata pensionable pay, not full-time equivalent — this can significantly lower your contribution rate.
NHS Pension · 2026/27 · NHSBSA Verified

NHS Pension Calculator 2026/27 — Contributions, Take-Home Pay & Retirement Estimate

Calculate your NHS pension contributions, take-home pay, and projected retirement income. All three scheme sections: 2015 CARE, 1995, and 2008. Instant estimate — no login required.

2015 CARE + 1995 + 2008
True cost after tax relief
Retirement projection
Lump sum & LSA check
Opt-out comparison
Scotland · NI · All regions
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Salary & Band
AfC Band
Annual Pensionable Salary (FTE)
£
Contracted Hours / Week 1.00 WTE
hrs
🗺️
Region
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Age & Retirement
Current Age
yrs
Planned Retirement Age
yrs
NPA for 2015 = State Pension Age (66/67/68). NPA 1995 = 60. NPA 2008 = 65. Min age = 55 (57 from April 2028).
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Pension Scheme Service Years
Years in 2015 CARE Scheme
yrs
Active members since April 2022. 1/54th accrual per year at CPI+1.5% revaluation.
Legacy 1995 Section Service (if any)
yrs
1/80th final salary + 3× auto lump sum. Closed to new accrual April 2022.
Legacy 2008 Section Service (if any)
yrs
1/60th reckonable pay. No automatic lump sum. Closed to new accrual April 2022.
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Projection Assumptions
Salary Growth Assumption: 2.0%
Estimated annual salary increase. Used for 2015 CARE projection.
CPI Assumption: 2.5%
Determines CARE revaluation: CPI + 1.5%. 2026/27 revaluation confirmed at 5.3% (3.8% CPI + 1.5%).
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Monthly Contributions & Take-Home
Pension tier
Your monthly contribution
Employer contribution
Income tax
National Insurance
Take-home with pension
True pension cost (after tax relief)
With pension
Opted out (no pension)
Opt-out extra take-home
But pension value lost
💡 Opting out means losing your employer's contribution too — for most NHS staff, opting out is rarely financially worthwhile.
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Projected Pension at Retirement
2015 CARE Scheme
Accrual this year (salary÷54)
Years to retirement
Revaluation rate
Projected 2015 pension
1995 Section — Legacy
Service
1995 annual pension (1/80th)
Automatic lump sum
2008 Section — Legacy
Service
2008 annual pension (1/60th)
Lump sum
Total annual pension
Monthly gross pension
Monthly net pension (est. after tax)
1995 automatic lump sum
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Lump Sum Options
1995 auto lump sum (3×)
Maximum total lump sum (commutation)
LSA cap
Pension after max commutation
Commutation: £12 lump sum per £1 annual pension given up. LSA cap = £268,275 tax-free (from 6 April 2024). Amounts above LSA taxed at marginal income tax rate.
Early Retirement Impact
Retiring early by
Reduction applied
Full pension at NPA
Reduced pension
Income given up/year
Break-even period
⚠️ Early retirement reduction is approximately 5% per year before NPA. Exact GAD actuarial factors vary — always verify with NHSBSA before making retirement decisions.
Opt-Out Comparison
Extra monthly take-home if opted out
Total pension input lost (employee + employer)
Employer contribution lost
True cost of pension (after tax relief)
⚠️Opting out means losing both your contributions AND your employer's contribution. For most NHS staff, opting out is rarely financially worthwhile. Seek independent financial advice before doing so.
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Annual Allowance Check
Pension Input Amount (PIA) this year
Annual Allowance (2026/27)£60,000
Effective AA
Remaining allowance
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Death in Service Benefits
Death lump sum
Adult dependant pension (est.)
Children's pensionPayable to eligible children up to age 23
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Additional Pension (AP)
Maximum AP 2026/27
2015 Scheme only (1995/2008 closed to AP)Yes
NHSBSA member hub · nhsbsa.nhs.uk/member-hub · NHSBSA FAQ KA-04622 (1995/2008 accrual) · NHSBSA FAQ KA-04929 (AP max £9,053 from April 2026) · NHS Employers 2026/27 contribution tiers · HSC Pension Service (NI 23.2%) · Scottish Government DDRB March 2026 · HMRC Annual Allowance £60,000 · LSA £268,275 (April 2024).
This is an estimate only. For your official projection, visit nhsbsa.nhs.uk/member-hub. Early retirement reductions are approximate (±5%/yr) — verify GAD factors with NHSBSA.

How the NHS Pension Scheme Works

The NHS Pension Scheme is a defined benefit scheme — not a savings pot. Your pension is calculated based on your salary and years of service, not investment returns.

👤 What You Contribute (Employee)

A percentage of your pensionable pay. The rate increases as your pay increases, from 5.2% up to 12.5% in England and Wales.

🏢 What Your Employer Contributes

Your NHS Trust adds a significant percentage of your pensionable pay on top of your own contributions. This doesn’t go into a personal pot — it funds the scheme, but it shows the true value of your membership.

🎁 What You Get in Return

  • A guaranteed annual income for life when you retire
  • Lump sum on retirement (tax-free)
  • Life insurance (death in service benefits)
  • Ill-health retirement benefits

NHS Pension Contribution Tiers 2026/27

England and Wales — 6 Tiers (from 1 April 2026)

Employer: 23.7%

The NHS pension moved from seven tiers to six from 1 April 2026. Many calculators still show the old structure. This calculator uses the correct 2026/27 rates.

TierAnnual Pensionable PayEmployee RateTypical AfC Bands
1Up to £13,2595.2%Band 2 entry, part-time Band 3
2£13,260–£28,8546.5%Band 3–4, Band 5 part-time
3£28,855–£35,1558.3%Band 5, Band 6 part-time
4£35,156–£52,7789.8%Band 6–7, Band 8a part-time
5£52,779–£67,66810.7%Band 8a, Band 8b entry
6Above £67,66912.5%Band 8b mid–top, 8c, 8d, Band 9
Key changes from 2025/26: NHS pension restructured from 7 tiers to 6 on 1 April 2026. Band 5 (£32,073) moved from 7.0% to 8.3% under the new Tier 3 boundary. Band 8b entry remains at 10.7% (Tier 5); Band 8b mid and above now pay 12.5% (Tier 6).

Scotland — 9 Tiers (NHS Pension Scheme Scotland)

Employer: 22.5%

Scotland uses a separate 9-tier structure with different rates and boundaries.

TierAnnual Pensionable PayEmployee Rate
1Up to £13,3305.7%
2£13,331–£26,7626.4%
3£26,763–£31,6697.0%
4£31,670–£39,7348.7%
5£39,735–£41,6699.8%
6£41,670–£50,65010.5%
7£50,651–£54,81111.2%
8£54,812–£76,65211.6%
9Above £76,65212.7%

Source: Scottish Government DDRB Evidence 24 March 2026 / PCS(AFC)2026/1

Northern Ireland — 6 Tiers (HSC Pension Scheme)

Employer: 23.2%

Northern Ireland uses the HSC Pension Scheme. It has 6 tiers like England/Wales but with different employee rates, typically 0.2%–0.5% higher at each tier.

TierAnnual Pensionable PayEmployee Rate
1Up to £13,2595.2%
2£13,260–£28,8546.7%
3£28,855–£35,1558.5%
4£35,156–£52,77810.0%
5£52,779–£67,66810.9%
6Above £67,66912.7%

Source: HSC Pension Service hscpensions.hscni.net, confirmed June 2026

What Is Pensionable Pay?

Your pension contribution is calculated on your pensionable pay, not your full gross pay. Getting this right affects both your monthly deduction and your future pension.

Pay ElementPensionable?Notes
Basic salary✅ YesAlways included
HCAS (London weighting)✅ YesIncluded per AfC Handbook Section 2.14
Unsocial hours enhancements✅ YesIncluded in pensionable pay
Overtime (Bands 2–7)✅ YesPensionable, confirmed NHSBSA
On-call availability payments❌ NoNot pensionable
One-off bonuses❌ NoNot pensionable

🏙️ HCAS is pensionable

Under AfC Handbook Section 2.14, London weighting (High Cost Area Supplement) is included in pensionable pay. If you work in a London HCAS zone, your pension contributions and tier are calculated on basic pay plus HCAS.

⏳ Overtime is pensionable (Bands 2–7)

Overtime is pensionable for AfC staff on Bands 2–7 (NHSBSA confirmed). Working overtime may push your total pensionable pay into a higher tier and increase your contribution rate.

Example Pension Contributions by Band and Region

🏴 England — 4 Examples
Example 1

Band 5 Full-Time Nurse (England)

Annual pensionable pay£32,073
Tier3
Employee rate8.3%
Employee contribution£222/month
Employer contribution (23.7%)£633/month
Total monthly pension£855/month
Example 2

Band 7 Full-Time Manager (England)

Annual pensionable pay£49,387
Tier4
Employee rate9.8%
Employee contribution£403/month
Employer contribution (23.7%)£975/month
Total monthly pension£1,379/month
Example 3

Band 8b Entry Senior Manager (England)

Annual pensionable pay£66,582
Tier5
Employee rate10.7%
Employee contribution£594/month
Employer contribution (23.7%)£1,315/month
Total monthly pension£1,909/month
Example 4

Part-Time Band 5 (22.5 hours, England)

Annual pensionable pay (pro-rata)£19,244
Tier2
Employee rate6.5%
Employee contribution£104/month
Employer contribution (23.7%)£380/month
Total monthly pension£484/month
Part-time tier note: Part-time staff fall into a lower pension tier because their pro-rata earnings are lower. The calculator applies the correct tier based on actual pensionable pay, not the full-time equivalent.
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 Wales — 2 Examples

Wales uses the same 6-tier structure as England, but with higher AfC(W) 02/2026 pay scales.

Example 5

Band 5 Entry (Wales)

Annual pensionable pay£32,557
Tier3
Employee rate8.3%
Employee contribution£225/month
Employer contribution (23.7%)£643/month
Total monthly pension£868/month
Example 6

Band 6 Entry (Wales)

Annual pensionable pay£40,559
Tier4
Employee rate9.8%
Employee contribution£331/month
Employer contribution (23.7%)£801/month
Total monthly pension£1,132/month
Wales AfC pay scales are higher than England across all bands, from £1,028 higher at Band 2 to over £6,000 higher at Band 9 top. Select Wales in the calculator for your correct figures.
🏰 Scotland — 1 Example

Scotland uses 9 pension tiers, a 36-hour full-time week, and a lower employer contribution rate of 22.5%.

Example 7

Band 5 Full-Time (Scotland)

Annual pensionable pay£34,544
Tier (of 9)4
Employee rate8.7%
Employee contribution£250/month
Employer contribution (22.5%)£648/month
Total monthly pension£898/month
A Band 5 nurse in Scotland earns more (£34,544) than in England (£32,073) and pays into a different 9-tier pension structure. Select Scotland in the calculator for the correct tier assignment.
Northern Ireland — 1 Example
Example 8

Band 5 Full-Time (Northern Ireland)

Annual pensionable pay£32,073
Tier3
Employee rate8.5%
Employee contribution£227/month
Employer contribution (23.2%)£620/month
Total monthly pension£847/month
NI uses the HSC Pension Scheme. Tier boundaries are the same as England, but rates are slightly higher (e.g. Tier 3 is 8.5% in NI vs 8.3% in England). The employer rate is 23.2%, not 23.7%.

Regional Differences for NHS Pension

NHS pension rules differ by nation. Contribution rates and tiers are not the same across all four nations.

NationSchemeEmployee TiersEmployee RatesEmployer Rate
EnglandNHS Pension Scheme (2015)6 tiers5.2%–12.5%23.7%
WalesNHS Pension Scheme (2015)6 tiers5.2%–12.5%23.7%
ScotlandNHS Pension Scheme (Scotland)9 tiers5.7%–12.7%22.5%
Northern IrelandHSC Pension Scheme6 tiers5.2%–12.7% (different rates)23.2%
Select your region in the calculator above for the correct tiers, rates, and employer contribution.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about NHS pension contribution rates, tiers, pensionable pay, employer contributions, and regional differences for 2026/27.

Employee rates range from 5.2% to 12.5% in England and Wales across 6 tiers, depending on your annual pensionable pay. Scotland uses 9 tiers from 5.7% to 12.7%. Northern Ireland uses 6 tiers with slightly higher rates than England (5.2% to 12.7%). See the tier tables above for your exact rate.

Your employer adds 23.7% of your pensionable pay in England and Wales, 22.5% in Scotland, and 23.2% in Northern Ireland. This is one of the highest employer pension contribution rates of any UK scheme.

Yes. High Cost Area Supplement is pensionable under AfC Handbook Section 2.14. It is included in your pensionable pay and affects your pension tier. The calculator includes HCAS in the pension base automatically.

Yes, for AfC Bands 2–7. NHSBSA confirms overtime counts as pensionable pay. Working overtime may push your total pensionable earnings into a higher tier and increase your pension contribution rate. On-call availability payments are not pensionable.

Pensionable pay = basic salary + HCAS (London weighting) + unsocial hours enhancements + overtime (Bands 2–7). On-call allowances and one-off bonuses are not pensionable.

No. Scotland uses a separate 9-tier structure under the NHS Pension Scheme (Scotland) with different tier boundaries and rates (5.7%–12.7%). The employer contribution is also different at 22.5% vs 23.7% in England. Select Scotland in the calculator for the correct figures.

Yes for the vast majority of staff. The NHS Pension Scheme is a defined benefit scheme — you receive a guaranteed income for life. Your employer adds a substantial contribution (23.7% in England) and you receive life insurance and ill-health retirement benefits. Opting out gains you your employee contribution in take-home pay, but you lose three times that in employer contributions alone.

You gain your employee contribution in take-home pay but lose the employer contribution and all future pension benefits. Use the opt-out comparison in the calculator to see your exact numbers.

Yes. Your pension tier is based on your actual pro-rata pensionable pay, not the full-time equivalent. A part-time Band 5 on 22.5 hours has pensionable pay of £19,244 (Tier 2 at 6.5%) rather than the full-time £32,073 (Tier 3 at 8.3%). The calculator applies this automatically.

Most current NHS staff are in the 2015 NHS Pension Scheme. If you joined before 2015, you may have legacy protections (1995 or 2008 section). This calculator uses the 2015 scheme contribution rates. Contact NHS Pensions via ESR or nhsbsa.nhs.uk/nhs-pension for your personal position.

Salary sacrifice reduces your gross pay, which reduces your pensionable pay, your pension contributions, and your future pension accrual. If you sacrifice into AVCs through the NHS scheme, your main scheme contributions continue on the reduced salary.

Contact NHS Pensions via your ESR (Electronic Staff Record) or at nhsbsa.nhs.uk/nhs-pension. This calculator is an estimate; your ESR pension record is the authoritative source.

Yes. You can make Additional Voluntary Contributions (AVCs) through the NHS pension scheme or through an external provider. AVCs can be taken as a salary sacrifice arrangement, which also saves on tax and NI.

Updated April 2026  |  6-tier restructure effective 1 April 2026  |  NHSBSA confirmed · HSC Pension Service confirmed June 2026 · Scottish Government PCS(AFC)2026/1  |  This calculator is an estimate — verify via ESR or nhsbsa.nhs.uk/nhs-pension