In 2022, the old NHS pension scheme – the “1995 Scheme” – was closed, and all active members were moved to the new “2015 Scheme”. After this date, members no longer accumulate benefits in the old scheme.
Staff had the option of taking retirement benefits from the old scheme and returning to work, but until April 2023 they were not allowed to accrue benefits in the new scheme if they did so. This changed after the Government introduced a rule designed to coax NHS retirees back to work.
Once staff pass “normal retirement age” – either aged 55 or 60, depending on their role – they can start claiming retirement benefits without facing any payment reductions for retiring early.
It means there is unlikely to be any good reason for staff to not start taking their 1995 pension after reaching this age, according to Quilter.
Despite this, thousands of staff do not understand how their pension works and are missing out on benefits.
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt scrapped the lifetime allowance cap of £1.073m on pension savings last year, after lobbying from the British Medical Association, which insisted that the tax was pushing senior NHS clinicians into early retirement.
However, the current system means NHS staff who want to draw their 1995 pension and continue working must either partially retire – where they reduce their pensionable pay and continue working – or leave the workforce and re-enter – known as “retire and rejoin” – both of which require their employer’s consent.
If the employer does not give consent, the member would be denied access to their 1995 pension benefits.
Graham Crossley, NHS pension specialist at Quilter, urged the Government to do more to make public sector health workers aware of the changes to the scheme and amend the rules.
He said: “In the private sector, an employee can take their personal pension benefits without informing their employer or getting their employer’s agreement, so why should the public sector be so different? The rule is very unfair and these archaic hurdles need to be removed.”
Most NHS staff benefit from “gold-plated” defined benefit pensions which promise an inflation-proof income guaranteed by the taxpayer – paid as a percentage of either their final or career average salary.
Retired public sector workers – including NHS doctors – were handed a 6.7pc pay rise in April, the second-highest for decades. The uplift will cost taxpayers an extra £2.5bn, according to investment firm Canada Life.