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Ages 16–18 · First-job pension

Pension auto-enrolment — the £1 your boss pays for every £1 you do

Your workplace pension is the only place an employer is legally obliged to put cash into your savings every month. Opting out at 22 can cost you over £100,000 by 67. Here's how it works.

Age band
16–18+
Reading time
9–11 min read
Topic
Workplace pensions
UK relevance
UK-wide
Tax year
2026/27
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

What this guide covers

When you're 22 or over and earning £10,000+ a year, your employer must put you in a workplace pension. The minimum is 5% from you, 3% from them, 1% in tax relief — that's 8% of your "qualifying earnings" going into a pension that compounds for 40+ years. Opting out at 22 to "save the money for now" can cost you £100,000+ in retirement income.

Who gets auto-enrolled

UK law (the Pensions Act 2008, in force since 2012) says employers must enrol "eligible jobholders" automatically into a workplace pension scheme. The three conditions:

If you're 16-21, you can still ask to join — and your employer must let you in, with the same contributions. If you do, you get the same employer match. So if you start work at 18 in a graduate scheme: ask to join the pension immediately. Don't wait until 22.

The 5% + 3% rule, and "qualifying earnings"

The legal minimum is 8% of "qualifying earnings" going into the pension. That breaks down as:

"Qualifying earnings" is the slice of your pay between £6,240 and £50,270 (2026/27 thresholds). Many good employers contribute on total salary, and some contribute much more than the 3% minimum.

EmployerTheir contributionYour contributionTotal going in
Minimum legal3%5%8% of qualifying earnings
Typical larger firm5-6%5%10-11%
Public sector (NHS, teaching, civil service)14-23%5-12%20-30%+
Top tech / finance / pharma10-15%5-10%15-25%

The compound-growth cost of opting out

"I'll start the pension later" is the most expensive financial decision under-25s make. Compound growth over 40 years is brutally unforgiving.

Worked example. Salary £25,000. 8% total auto-enrolment contribution = £2,000/yr into the pot. Assume 5% real annual growth (after inflation).

Start ageYears contributingTotal paid inPot at age 67 (5% growth)
2245£90,000~£317,000
2740£80,000~£247,000
3235£70,000~£190,000
3730£60,000~£144,000

Opting out at 22 to "save the money" until 27 costs you ~£70,000 in retirement pot. That's not because you didn't pay in — it's because you missed 5 years of compounding and 5 years of employer match.

Hard rule. Opting out of auto-enrolment to get more take-home pay is almost never worth it under 30. You're refusing free money from your employer plus 25% tax relief from the government on top.

How tax relief makes it cheaper than it looks

The way pension tax relief works on auto-enrolment can look confusing on a payslip but the maths is generous.

Your 5% contribution comes out of your pre-tax pay. So if you earn £24,000 and put 5% (£1,200) in, your taxable income drops to £22,800. You save 20% Income Tax on the £1,200 = £240.

The £1,200 lands in your pension. Out of your net pay, it really cost you £960. That's a 25% boost just from tax relief, on top of the employer's 3% match.

Higher earners (40%+ tax) get even more. £1 net into a pension can be £1.66 in the pot for a 40% taxpayer.

What to actually do on your first payday

  1. Open your payslip. Find the "Pension" line. Confirm it says you're paying in.
  2. Ring HR or check your contract. Ask: what's the employer contribution and is there a "match" if I pay in more?
  3. If your employer offers a match (e.g. "we'll match up to 6%"), set your contribution to that maximum. That's extra free money you're leaving on the table otherwise.
  4. Open the pension provider's app/website. Pick where the money is invested. The "default" fund is usually fine for under-25s — but check it's a global equity fund and not a cash-heavy one.
  5. Save the login details somewhere safe.

NCNational Curriculum links

Full mapping in the curriculum map.

Cite this guide
UK Tax Drag (2026). Pension auto-enrolment — the £1 your boss pays for every £1 you do. Ages 16–18 deep guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/ages-16-18-pension-auto-enrolment.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0).
Not financial advice. This guide explains how the UK system works for educational purposes. Always check current rates and rules at gov.uk and consider talking to a qualified adviser before making real financial decisions, especially before age 18.