State Pension age increase for anyone born after July 6, 1960 | Personal Finance | Finance


An ongoing increase to the State Pension age in the UK will affect when pensioners born after July 6, 1960, can start claiming payments from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP).

The State Pension age is currently in the process of rising from 66 to 67, with the increase being introduced graudally in one-month increments over a two-year period which began on April 6 this year. The phased increase delays when people who have a 66th birthday that falls within this timeframe can start claiming their State Pension, meaning some people will just be a month or two away from turning 67 before they can get their first payment. The next phase of the age increase will begin this month affecting anyone born between July 6, 1960, and August 5, 1960.

According to the DWP timetable, pensioners due to turn 66 between these dates face an extra four-month wait before they can claim their State Pension.

So if you were born on July 6, 1960, the age increase means you will become eligible to claim your State Pension on November 6, 2026, when you are exactly 66 years and four months old.

State Pension eligibility becomes further delayed the later in the year your 66th birthday falls, increasing by one month each time. It means those turning 66 in the month from August 6 face an extra five-month wait, while those turning 66 in the month from September 6 face an extra six-month wait, and so on until the age rise to 67 is complete.

Listed below is the DWP timetable for the State Pension age increse from 66 to 67, which shows when people with birthdays between April 6, 1960, and March 5, 1961 can claim their State Pension:

  • May 6, 1960 – June 5, 1960: 66 years and 2 months

  • June 6, 1960 – July 5, 1960: 66 years and 3 months

  • July 6, 1960 – August 5, 1960: 66 years and 4 months

  • August 6, 1960 – September 5, 1960: 66 years and 5 months

  • September 6, 1960 – October 5, 1960: 66 years and 6 months

  • October 6, 1960 – November 5, 1960: 66 years and 7 months

  • November 6, 1960 – December 5, 1960: 66 years and 8 months

  • December 6, 1960 – January 5, 1961: 66 years and 9 months

  • January 6, 1961 – February 5, 1961: 66 years and 10 months

  • February 6, 1961 – March 5, 1961: 66 years and 11 months

  • March 6, 1961 – April 5, 1977: 67 years

  • The DWP said: “The Pensions Act 2014 brought the increase in the State Pension age from 66 to 67 forward by eight years. The State Pension age for men and women will now increase to 67 between 2026 and 2028.

    “The Government also changed the way in which the increase in State Pension age is phased so that rather than reaching State Pension age on a specific date, people born between 6 April 1960 and 5 March 1961 will reach their State Pension age at 66 years and the specified number of months.

    “For people born after 5 April 1969 but before 6 April 1977, under the Pensions Act 2007, State Pension age was already 67.”



    Source link