Mixed Age Couples State Pension Calculator

Mixed Age Couples State Pension Calculator | UK Pension Estimator 2026
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Mixed Age Couples State Pension Calculator

Estimate your UK State Pension and Pension Credit entitlement as a mixed-age couple. Based on 2026/27 rates, National Insurance records, and current DWP rules.

🇬🇧 UK DWP Rules
💷 2026/27 Rates
📐 NI Qualifying Years
📊 Pension Credit Check

Mixed Age Couples Pension Estimator

Calculate State Pension and Pension Credit for couples with different pension ages

Pension Regime
Partner Details
Partner 1 (Older)
yrs

Must be at State Pension age (66) to be receiving pension

yrs

35 years needed for full new State Pension; 30 years for full basic

Partner 2 (Younger)
yrs

If under State Pension age, pension shown as “future entitlement”

yrs

Estimated qualifying years on NI record to date

Common scenarios:

Other Income (for Pension Credit)
£

Occupational pensions, part-time work, rental income, etc. (weekly)

£

Every £500 over £10,000 counts as £1/week income for Pension Credit


Display Options

Pension Estimate

State Pension & Pension Credit for mixed-age couples

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Enter both partners’ ages and National Insurance years, then click Calculate to see your estimated State Pension and Pension Credit.

State Pension Age by Birth Year

Use this table to find your State Pension age based on your date of birth. This is critical for mixed-age couples to determine eligibility and timing.

Date of Birth State Pension Age Date Reached SPA Pension Regime
Before 6 Apr 195365 (men) / 60–65 (women)By 5 Apr 2018Old (Basic) State Pension
6 Apr 1953 – 5 Dec 1953656 Apr 2018 – 5 Dec 2018Old (Basic) State Pension
6 Dec 1953 – 5 Feb 1954656 Dec 2018 – 5 Feb 2019Old (Basic) State Pension
6 Feb 1954 – 5 Apr 1954656 Feb 2019 – 5 Apr 2019Old (Basic) State Pension
6 Apr 1954 – 5 Apr 1960666 Apr 2020 – 5 Apr 2026New State Pension
6 Apr 1960 – 5 Mar 1961666 Apr 2026 – 5 Mar 2027New State Pension
6 Mar 1961 – 5 Apr 1977676 Mar 2028 – 5 Apr 2044New State Pension
6 Apr 1977 onwards686 Apr 2045 onwardsNew State Pension

Mixed Age Couples Pension FAQ

Everything you need to know about State Pension and Pension Credit for mixed-age couples in the UK.

A mixed-age couple is a couple where one partner has reached State Pension age and the other has not. In the UK, this typically means one partner was born before 6 April 1953 (reaching pension age before April 2016) and the other was born after. Special transitional rules apply to these couples regarding Pension Credit and Universal Credit, particularly around the 15 May 2019 cutoff date.

The full new State Pension for 2026/27 is estimated at approximately £230.55 per week (£11,988.60 per year). The actual amount you receive depends on your National Insurance record — you need 35 qualifying years for the full amount, and at least 10 years to receive any new State Pension. Each year between 10 and 35 adds roughly 1/35th of the full amount.

Under the new State Pension rules (from 6 April 2016), you need 35 qualifying years on your National Insurance record to receive the full amount. You need at least 10 qualifying years to receive any State Pension at all. Under the old basic State Pension, you need 30 qualifying years for the full basic amount. Each year between 10 and 30 (old) or 10 and 35 (new) adds a proportional amount.

Yes, but with important restrictions introduced in 2019. If the younger partner reaches State Pension age on or after 15 May 2019, the couple cannot claim Pension Credit until BOTH partners have reached State Pension age. Before this date, mixed-age couples could claim Pension Credit when the older partner reached pension age. Couples affected by the 2019 change may be eligible for transitional protection or Housing Cost support via Universal Credit.

In 2026, the State Pension age in the UK is 66 for both men and women. It is scheduled to rise to 67 between 2026 and 2028, and to 68 between 2037 and 2039, though these dates are under government review. Women born in the 1950s were affected by the equalisation of the State Pension age, which increased from 60 to 66 between 2010 and 2018.

Under the new State Pension rules, you cannot inherit the basic State Pension itself. However, you may be able to inherit an extra payment from your partner’s National Insurance record if they reached State Pension age before 6 April 2016, or if they had deferred claiming their pension. You may also inherit a protected payment or shared additional pension in certain cases. Under the old rules, widows/widowers could inherit up to 100% of their partner’s additional State Pension.

For 2026/27, the Pension Credit standard minimum guarantee is estimated at approximately £227.10 per week for a single person and £346.60 per week for a couple. If your income is below these amounts, Pension Credit can top it up. Additional amounts are available for disability (Severe Disability Premium), caring responsibilities, and housing costs. Savings over £10,000 reduce entitlement by £1 per week for every £500 (or part thereof) over the threshold.

You can claim your State Pension when you reach State Pension age (currently 66). You can also choose to defer claiming, which increases your pension by 1% for every 9 weeks you defer (just under 5.8% per year). The DWP should send you a claim letter around 4 months before you reach State Pension age. It is strongly recommended to check your State Pension forecast on GOV.UK before claiming, and to consider the impact on Pension Credit and other means-tested benefits.

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