Did You Overpay Tax on Your Pension? Nearly £1.6bn Has Been Reclaimed

May 11, 2026
Scott Kingsley

Markets tend to get the attention, while taxes rarely do. Yet since 2015, nearly £1.6bn has been reclaimed by individuals who overpaid tax on pensions when accessing their funds

Indeed, HMRC confirmed that more than £44m was returned in the first quarter of 2026 alone. In that same period, almost 14,000 reclaim forms were processed, with an average repayment of just over £3,000. 

That isn’t a one-off issue or a statistical anomaly - it’s something that happens repeatedly, and it raises a fairly straightforward question. If that much has been reclaimed, how much has simply gone unnoticed?

Most people assume that when tax is deducted, it’s correct. The system feels automatic and final, and once a number appears on a statement or payslip, it tends to be accepted without much thought. 

In many areas, that assumption holds up reasonably well, but when it comes to tax on pensions, it often doesn’t, and that isn’t because something has gone wrong, but because of how the system is designed to operate.

How pension withdrawals get overtaxed

The issue largely comes down to how withdrawals are treated, particularly the first one in a tax year. 

When you access your pension flexibly, HMRC will usually apply what’s known as a “month 1” tax code. In simple terms, this assumes that whatever you withdraw will continue at the same level each month for the rest of the year.

So if you take £20,000 as a one-off, the system may treat it as if you were earning £20,000 every month, leading to a fairly predictable outcome. Your annual income is overestimated, a higher level of tax on pensions is applied upfront, and the deduction can feel disproportionately large relative to what you expected.

For those taking regular income, this tends to correct itself over time as more data feeds into the system, but for those making a single withdrawal, it often doesn’t, which is where the reclaim process comes in.

At that point, you can either:

  • Submit a reclaim form directly to HMRC
  • Wait until the end of the tax year for the position to be reconciled

In both cases, the result is the same - money that didn’t need to be paid is returned later. From a technical perspective, nothing has gone wrong, as the system has simply followed its own logic. However, from a practical perspective, it introduces unnecessary friction (and potential cash flow issues) into what many assume should be a straightforward process.

The average reclaim of around £3,000 is not insignificant, particularly when it represents money that didn’t need to leave your account in the first place. 

The bigger issue: Trusting the system

This is where the conversation moves beyond mechanics and into behaviour. Most people don’t actively check the tax on pensions they pay because, when tax is deducted through PAYE, it tends to be assumed that it’s already been calculated correctly. There’s a degree of trust built into that process.

That trust isn’t entirely misplaced, but it can be incomplete.

The current system is designed to process millions of transactions consistently and efficiently. But it isn’t designed to perfectly reflect individual circumstances at the exact point a withdrawal is made, and that distinction matters more than it might first appear.

The £1.6bn reclaimed suggests that a significant number of people have, at some point, paid too much tax on pensions and then taken steps to recover it. Importantly, that figure reflects only those who actively reclaimed the overpaid tax, so it doesn’t show how many people didn’t notice, didn’t question it, or simply assumed it would correct itself over time.

In practice, responses tend to vary. Some people notice immediately and act, while others deal with it later or assume it will resolve on its own. Many won’t notice at all.

That variation comes down to engagement: tax that is deducted automatically tends to feel final, even when, in situations like this, it is often just the starting point rather than the finished position.

Where things tend to go wrong

The underlying pattern behind most overpayments isn’t particularly complex, and it rarely comes down to obscure rules or technical misunderstandings. Instead, it’s usually the result of how and when decisions are made.

Certain situations tend to increase the likelihood of overpaying tax on pensions, particularly where the structure is lacking:

  • One-off withdrawals, where there is no prior income in the tax year, and the system defaults immediately to its standard assumptions
  • Ad hoc decisions, where money is taken “as needed” without considering the wider tax position or how the withdrawal fits into the overall year
  • Timing mismatches, where withdrawals are made without reference to the tax year or other income streams, which can distort the final outcome
  • Lack of coordination, where pension withdrawals are treated separately from salary, dividends or other sources of income

Individually, none of these is unusual, but when combined, they can result in a higher tax on pensions than is necessary.

For expats and internationally mobile individuals, the situation can become more complex. It’s not uncommon to have income earned in one country, pensions held in another, and expenditure spread across multiple currencies. 

Add in different tax years, reporting requirements and exchange rate movements, and the overall picture can become fragmented quite quickly.

In that environment, decisions are often made in isolation rather than as part of a joined-up plan. 

A withdrawal that appears reasonable in one context may not be when viewed across the full financial position, which is where overpayment becomes more likely - not because the rules are unclear, but because the full picture isn’t always considered.

A more structured approach

Avoiding unnecessary tax on pensions doesn’t require anything particularly complex. It benefits from a more deliberate approach, particularly when withdrawals are planned rather than taken reactively.

A few practical steps tend to make a noticeable difference:

  • Understand your overall position, including total income for the tax year, rather than viewing the pension in isolation, as this provides the context needed to anticipate how withdrawals will be taxed
  • Consider timing carefully, as the same withdrawal can produce different outcomes depending on when it is taken, and spreading withdrawals across tax years where possible can reduce the overall tax impact
  • Avoid large, single withdrawals where possible, as phasing access can reduce the likelihood of excessive tax being applied upfront under emergency coding
  • Check what has been deducted, rather than assuming the figure is correct simply because it has been processed, as reviewing the level of tax on pensions applied can often highlight issues early
  • Use the reclaim process where necessary, even if it feels administrative, as it is the mechanism designed to correct these situations

For expats, the emphasis shifts slightly towards coordination, as aligning pension withdrawals with broader cross-border tax planning becomes more important. Decisions made in one jurisdiction need to be considered in the context of the wider financial picture.

None of this is about trying to outmanoeuvre the system or apply complex strategies. It’s simply about avoiding default outcomes where they don’t serve your interests.

Why does this keep happening?

Given how well documented this issue is, it’s reasonable to ask why it continues to occur. The answer sits partly in how the system is structured, and partly in how people interact with it.

From an administrative perspective, applying an emergency tax code upfront ensures that sufficient tax is collected early, reducing the risk of underpayment. It’s a consistent and scalable approach, even if it isn’t always precise.

Adjusting perfectly for every individual scenario in real time would introduce complexity and delay, so a more practical approach is used: apply a standard approach first and adjust later if required. That works well at scale, but it doesn’t always produce the most accurate outcome at the point of withdrawal.

On the behavioural side, pension decisions are often infrequent and spaced out, so they don’t always receive the same level of attention as ongoing financial matters, such as investments or income. There’s also a tendency to view tax as something that simply happens, rather than something that can be influenced through structure and timing.

When those two factors come together - standardised processes and relatively low engagement- the outcome is fairly predictable. It helps explain why tax overpayments on pensions persist even when the underlying mechanics are well understood.

More than a decade after pension freedoms were introduced, the issue remains largely unchanged, which suggests it is structural rather than temporary.

The broader point

While this example focuses on pensions, the underlying lesson is more general. Financial systems are designed to operate efficiently and consistently, prioritising process over personalisation, and they aren’t built to optimise outcomes for every individual scenario.

That’s where planning becomes important.

Paying tax on pensions is part of the process, but overpaying and reclaiming it later doesn’t have to be. The £1.6bn figure serves as a reminder of the gap that can exist between default outcomes and optimal ones.

For most people, closing that gap doesn’t require complex solutions or significant changes; it simply requires:

  • A bit more awareness
  • Some structure around decisions
  • A willingness to check what is happening 

Small adjustments, particularly around timing and coordination, can have a disproportionate impact, and over time, those incremental improvements tend to matter more than any single decision.

Get in touch with Scott Kingsley

If you’d like to sense-check how your pension withdrawals are structured, particularly across different income sources or jurisdictions, we’re always happy to talk it through. A short conversation can often highlight whether your current approach to tax on pensions is working as intended, or whether a few small adjustments could improve the overall outcome.

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