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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Pension credit only £3 less than State Pension

604 replies

SpanishBaguette · 16/09/2025 13:16

Maybe it's been obvious to others but I've only just found out that Pension Credit will top you up to no less than £227 per week which is only £3 less than the state pension.

AIBU to be hacked off that I need to pay 35 years of contributions to end up with a near identical pension to someone who gets it for free. WTF?

OP posts:
BashfulClam · 16/09/2025 16:48

TwilightSkies · 16/09/2025 13:19

If you’ve worked for 35 years surely you having savings and private pensions? So you’ll be better off than those who get a Pension Credit top-up.

ha ha ha ha ha yeah because I can afford savings and a pension! I’d rather be able to eat as each month i have about 2 pence after bills and food.

Itstheshowgirl · 16/09/2025 16:48

SamphiretheTervosaur · 16/09/2025 13:20

We have a rule in our house. It's one of the few rules we both stick to

We do not mention this. We don't talk about feckless SIL, nephew etc who will reap the reward of Pension Credit having lived off various other benefits for the vast majority of their lives.

That we each have one such on our side of the family helps us not get to personal about it. But blood pressures get raised whenever the topic is raised.

So we don't allow it in our house

We pretend we don't know and we just ignore it!

Same

Paetina · 16/09/2025 16:49

ComtesseDeSpair · 16/09/2025 13:25

It’s just how the system works. Just as some people pay very little tax and use loads of services, others pay a lot and may never avail themselves of much. There’s not really an alternative which wouldn’t see many older people struggling (as many did prior to state pension changes and pension credit) and overall I find it preferable to having to step over poverty-stricken homeless pensioners on my way to the opera.

Edited

This.

Those that get exactly the same full state pension willl have contributed vastly different amounts in tax over their working lives. We could go on ad infinitum.

Locutus2000 · 16/09/2025 16:50

SpanishBaguette · 16/09/2025 15:34

OMG don't be such a conspiracy theorist. There was a thread today where someone mentioned about pension credit (I think the 'DH prioritises 10k/year' or 'retired parents too busy for me' but I'm not going to trawl back through for you) and I looked it up as had never heard of it.
Another poster has said how 2Billion pension credit is unclaimed every year so it obviously is something lots of people are unaware of, thus explaining my surprise.
Of course maybe those other threads are all planted too!

Are you proud of spreading yet more division whilst it tears society apart OP?

BashfulClam · 16/09/2025 16:53

GETTINGLIKEMYMOTHER · 16/09/2025 16:33

My DF wasn’t a teacher or a civil servant, nor was he ever rich. He worked for private sector companies and paid into a pension that enabled him and DM to live quite comfortably after he retired.
A generous percentage of his pension continued to be paid to DM for many years after he died.

There are no schemes like that now. My father worked in a decent job, my mum worked part time in a shop. They both retired at 55 with final salary pensions. My mum now makes more in pensions than I make working full time, she also owns her home outright! I will never have that kind of life as a prndionrt,

Teenageneerdowell · 16/09/2025 16:53

Harriet9955 · 16/09/2025 16:44

People who become disabled after state pension age have not had their working lives restricted by disability? the amounts that some are getting especially couples on disability benefits and both claiming to be carers for each other are huge ! This is on top of the actual disability benefits themselves. No wonder the country is broke. Even the people themselves are shocked at how much they are getting and keep asking if it's correct !!

Edited

Yes but they still have greater costs due to disability, hence the disability benefit. Premiums recognise this. And carers save the government billions each year, and most carers cannot get carer's allowance after state pension age and the premium is some redress for this.

ShyMaryEllen · 16/09/2025 16:55

Paetina · 16/09/2025 16:49

This.

Those that get exactly the same full state pension willl have contributed vastly different amounts in tax over their working lives. We could go on ad infinitum.

And those who have saved towards a small extra pension will pay tax on that, too, so any rise in SP will be worth 20% less than it is for those on PC.

It's all very unfair, but what can be done without making a lot of older people very vulnerable?

Harriet9955 · 16/09/2025 16:56

Teenageneerdowell · 16/09/2025 16:53

Yes but they still have greater costs due to disability, hence the disability benefit. Premiums recognise this. And carers save the government billions each year, and most carers cannot get carer's allowance after state pension age and the premium is some redress for this.

Yes I'm not really talking about people who are carers and just getting the carers premium. I'm talking about multiple premiums building up on one claim which give some people huge amounts. I've had one couple recently getting £1500 a month in disability benefits and pension credits plus all rent and council tax paid. Neither needed to pay for carers. It's unsustainable.

Teenageneerdowell · 16/09/2025 16:57

Harriet9955 · 16/09/2025 16:56

Yes I'm not really talking about people who are carers and just getting the carers premium. I'm talking about multiple premiums building up on one claim which give some people huge amounts. I've had one couple recently getting £1500 a month in disability benefits and pension credits plus all rent and council tax paid. Neither needed to pay for carers. It's unsustainable.

Edited

The premiums are for disability and or caring - not sure what other premiums you might be talking about.

Elleherd · 16/09/2025 16:59

Harriet9955 · 16/09/2025 16:44

People who become disabled after state pension age have not had their working lives restricted by disability? the amounts that some are getting especially couples on disability benefits and both claiming to be carers for each other are huge ! This is on top of the actual disability benefits themselves. No wonder the country is broke. Even the people themselves are shocked at how much they are getting and keep asking if it's correct !!

Edited

People who become disabled after pension age can only get attendance allowance, which doesn't contain a mobility allowance as they are no longer expected to need to leave their homes.

Edited as I realize you're counting Attendance Allowance as a disability benefit

Teenageneerdowell · 16/09/2025 17:00

Elleherd · 16/09/2025 16:59

People who become disabled after pension age can only get attendance allowance, which doesn't contain a mobility allowance as they are no longer expected to need to leave their homes.

Edited as I realize you're counting Attendance Allowance as a disability benefit

Edited

Attendance Allowance is a disability benefit, albeit one without a mobility component.

SauronsArsehole · 16/09/2025 17:01

I spent 18years raising a disabled child. No chance to earn a pension (yet!) I’m glad that safety net is there. I’m busy now paying into a private pension, trying to build savings whilst working and on UC so I’m limited to what I can save. I’ve only maybe 27/28yrs of investment instead of the 50 ish over my working life.

but fuck I am with you when I see people not even trying. I’m frustrated with my situation because it was beyond my control. But I’m making a point to fix it for myself.

I wish the system worked better but how do we fix it so workers have a fairer set up than those that don’t and those that can’t aren’t penalised?

Boomer55 · 16/09/2025 17:01

IShouldNotCoco · 16/09/2025 13:56

I don’t think that is true. My parents have never qualified for PC and they only have one house for which the mortgage is paid off.

Owning a house is irrelevant. It’s based purely on income, with a cap on savings.

CoralPombear · 16/09/2025 17:03

IShouldNotCoco · 16/09/2025 13:49

People on pension credit aren’t allowed to have any savings, I believe. Others who dont qualify for it own their own house and / or have significant savings. So they are in a much better position that those on pension credit. I honestly can’t believe what I’m reading 🙄

Edited

They are in far from a better position when it comes to paying for care if they have assets.

Elleherd · 16/09/2025 17:03

Teenageneerdowell · 16/09/2025 17:00

Attendance Allowance is a disability benefit, albeit one without a mobility component.

I just realized its being counted as that, and edited accordingly. 🙂

Freda69 · 16/09/2025 17:07

There are some real anomalies in the whole system. I get more state pension than my husband even though he worked many more years than me, because I’m older than him, had a better job and I was in SERPS. But my 91 year old DMiL gets more than either of us, even though she’s never worked, because she inherited her husband’s state pension. The figures you see quoted for both the old and new state pension scheme don’t give a very true picture.
And yes it seems unfair that you get pension credit if you’ve never worked, which is a gateway to other freebies, while if you’re just above the pension credit limit, you have to pay for those things.

bapples1 · 16/09/2025 17:07

because she inherited her husband’s state pension.

Does this still happen?

cordeliaflynne · 16/09/2025 17:19

A major factor is also if you own your own home or are renting. Various factors over the years, including the breakdown of her marriage after retirement, mean my mother has a reasonable workplace pension having worked for the NHS but most of it goes on paying rent. She is far worse off that someone getting pension credit but who owns their own home outright (which is not unusual by pension age).

Teribus21 · 16/09/2025 17:21

FLOWER19833 · 16/09/2025 13:24

Not everyone working full time for 35 years can afford to pay into private pension or have savings. This is why people can't be arsed to work as they know they are going to get benefits till they are dead so whats the point

This is certainly true and employers have only had to provide pension schemes since 2012. Before that, many small companies, which constitute the overwhelming majority of businesses, didn’t provide pensions, a fact that usually seems to go unnoticed by the generously provided for. Also, many of the circa 4 million self employed people, who tend to be lower earners, may not earn enough to pay into a private pension scheme. Even if you do or did pay into a private scheme as an individual, the returns can be very disappointing. For me, a bigger scandal than pension credits is the £54bn it costs per year to fund very generous, index-linked public sector pensions to workers who are are also able to claim the state pension! Yet we are told frequently that the triple lock must go.

CoralPombear · 16/09/2025 17:25

cordeliaflynne · 16/09/2025 17:19

A major factor is also if you own your own home or are renting. Various factors over the years, including the breakdown of her marriage after retirement, mean my mother has a reasonable workplace pension having worked for the NHS but most of it goes on paying rent. She is far worse off that someone getting pension credit but who owns their own home outright (which is not unusual by pension age).

Not relevant to the main discussion but she should be claiming Housing Benefit and Council Tax Reduction from the council if she’s over state pension age.

DancingLions · 16/09/2025 17:27

The issue for people in SH, myself included, is that anything you have over state pension would go on rent. My rent is close to 1k a month now (god knows what it will be in 10yrs when I retire). If I have state pension alone then benefits will pay my rent. For various reasons I was never going to have a pension that paid over £1k a month. So there wasn't any point paying into one at all in the end as I wouldn't see any of the money.

As others have said in this thread, a small private pension can leave you worse off then someone without one. There should be some way for that not to be the case, otherwise more people will catch on and opt out of saving like I did. At the moment a lot of people still blindly believe that a small private pension is better than none but they will realise. Plus more and more people are struggling to buy a home now so even more will end up renting in retirement.

Superhansrantowindsor · 16/09/2025 17:28

Yanbu.
Where is the incentive to work hard and save etc? People work their guts out for years and years in a low paid job - they shouldn’t have bothered.

CoralPombear · 16/09/2025 17:28

*Apologies to derail and it may be that her income is too high but I just wanted to point this out as some people don’t realise it’s a different system to Universal Credit after state retirement age and that they may have an entitlement to some help.

LambriniBobInIsleworthISeesYa · 16/09/2025 17:30

Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?

TheSpiritofDarkandLonelyWater · 16/09/2025 17:32

LambriniBobInIsleworthISeesYa · 16/09/2025 17:30

Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?

What is that meant to mean?