Defined Benefit Pension Transfer Value Calculator
Estimate your Defined Benefit (final salary) pension Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV). Compare your guaranteed income against a potential lump sum transfer to a DC scheme.
Pension Transfer Details
Enter your current DB pension details and an assumed transfer factor to estimate your CETV and compare it to a DC drawdown income.
The annual income your scheme currently guarantees you at your normal retirement age.
The multiplier used by actuaries to calculate your CETV. Typically ranges from 20x to 35x.
The annual percentage you expect to safely withdraw from a DC pension pot in retirement (e.g., 4%).
Transfer Value Estimate
Estimated CETV and equivalent DC scheme comparison
Enter your DB pension details and transfer factor above, then click Calculate Transfer Value to see your estimated CETV.
UK Pension Transfer Factor Benchmarks
Understanding transfer factors helps you gauge whether your scheme’s CETV offer is competitive or if market conditions are affecting your valuation.
| Transfer Factor | Estimated CETV (on £15k) | Context / Market Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| 20x – 22x | £300k – £330k | Typical in high-interest rate environments or for younger members. |
| 24x – 28x | £360k – £420k | Standard range in current market conditions for members near retirement. |
| 30x – 35x | £450k – £525k | High transfer values due to low gilt yields, generous indexation, or ill health. |
| Commutation Rate | 12:1 or 16:1 | Rate at which you can swap annual pension for a tax-free lump sum within the DB scheme. |
| FCA Advice Threshold | £30,000 | Mandatory FCA-regulated advice required for DB transfers exceeding this value. |
Defined Benefit Transfers FAQ
Everything you need to know about Cash Equivalent Transfer Values (CETV), final salary pensions, and UK FCA regulations.
A Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV) is the estimated lump sum value of your Defined Benefit (final salary) pension if you choose to transfer it out of the scheme into a Defined Contribution (DC) pension. It represents the cash amount the scheme trustees believe is needed to buy an equivalent level of retirement benefits elsewhere.
CETVs are calculated by scheme actuaries using complex factors. They consider your current accrued pension, your age, your normal retirement age, and current economic conditions (specifically gilt yields and inflation expectations). When gilt yields fall, transfer values typically rise because the scheme needs a larger lump sum to generate the same guaranteed income.
A transfer factor is the multiplier applied to your annual pension to calculate the CETV. Historically, factors ranged from 15x to 20x. However, in recent years, due to low interest rates and improved life expectancy, typical transfer factors have ranged between 24x and 35x, and sometimes even higher for older members or schemes with generous indexation.
Yes. Under UK FCA rules, if your Defined Benefit pension transfer value exceeds £30,000, you are legally required to seek advice from a pension specialist who holds the appropriate permissions (usually a CASS qualified adviser) before the transfer can take place. Even if it is under £30,000, seeking professional advice is highly recommended due to the complexity and risks involved.
Transferring a DB pension means giving up guaranteed, inflation-linked income for life. In a DC scheme, your income depends on investment performance, and you bear the risk of outliving your pot. You also lose valuable protections like the scheme’s generous death benefits and the employer’s guarantee. You should only transfer if the flexibility and potential inheritance benefits outweigh the loss of guaranteed security.
