Hi all, wonder if any of you can offer some help?
My wife and I retire in 2022. There may be pension changes before then but under current arrangements will we get a state pension each or a married couple’s pension?
Currently the state pension is approx. £700.00 per person, so would we expect to receive £1400.00?
I am guessing you are not yet 65 so will be under the new state pension as opposed to the one people got when they retired aged 65, you and your wife were born in 1955? If so each of you will receive your own pension and as stated above this depends on your work history.
BAD news
If you have, I think, less than 10 years of contributions you will get nothing, I doubt that will be your situation though.
BETTER news
AIUI you will need 35 years of full contributions, so any period you were contracted-out will be deducted from those 35 years for the purpose of calculation of your Govt state pension. I am the same age as you, born in 1955, and I will also retire (officially) in 2020 I have worked since I was 16 but because of being contracted out for a while will not receive the full state pension (I think I have or will have 34 years worth of contributions). Your wife's pension will be based also on her work history, there's no such thing as married couples pension anymore, nor a widow's pension, however, if you had children she "should" have been credited with the years she received child benefit if she worked and didnt earn enough to receive credit for those years, bear in mind the earnings threshold is slightly lower than the threshold for paying NI, so she may have years that count despite not paying NI. It's quite a complicated equation for females.
If you or your wife were contracted you will receive an enhanced pension from your employer and shouldnt suffer a lower income because of being contracted out, however how you work that out I have no idea, again it's so damn complicated.
If you should die before your wife then she wont receive a widow's pension based on your contributions as was the case in the past, sadly her income will drop to whatever pension she has in her own right based on her contributions but apparently she may be eligible for UC (Universal Credit).
And finally any state pension either of you receive will be added to any other income you receive at the time, so work based pension(s), dividends (they are dealt with slightly differently at present) or any other income and taxed at the appropriate rate after personal allowances have been deducted.
You can get a statement of what pension both of you will receive from the Govt website, currently I think it's about £8000 pa for full contribution history.