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State Graduated Pension Scheme meaning

What does State Graduated Pension Scheme mean?
In legal practice, the State Graduated Pension Scheme describes the UK’s first earnings‑related addition to the basic State Pension, operating from 1961 to 1975. Established under the National Insurance Act 1959 (with parallel Northern Ireland legislation), it required graduated contributions on band earnings, purchasing “units” that produced a modest additional state pension known as graduated retirement benefit, payable at State Pension age. Contracting‑out was permitted where an occupational pension scheme provided equivalent pension benefits (EPBs). In such cases, graduated contributions were not paid and the occupational scheme assumed liability. Historic EPBs and contracted‑out service under this regime can still affect entitlement, scheme administration, equalisation exercises and transaction due diligence, and may appear on HMRC National Insurance records and state pension forecasts. The scheme was abolished with effect from April 1975 and was succeeded by the State Earnings‑Related Pension Scheme (SERPS) from 1978 under the Social Security Pensions Act 1975. Usage and legal effect are consistent across England & Wales and Scotland, with mirrored provisions in Northern Ireland. The term has no direct counterpart in Irish pensions law. Practitioners most often encounter it in pensions due diligence, divorce pension sharing, estate administration and historic data reconciliation.
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View the related Checklists about State Graduated Pension Scheme

CHECKLISTS
UK State Pension rates and earnings cap: historical figures by tax year 1989/90 to 2026/27 (pre-2016 basic and post-2016 single-tier)

The single tier State Pension (on and from 6 April 2016) On 6 April 2016, the Basic State Pension was overhauled and replaced by a single-tier, flat-rate pension, merging the Basic State Pension with the Second State Pension. From that date, men and women alike must have 35 qualifying years of National Insurance contributions to receive the full flat-rate amount. Marital status makes no difference to the level paid. Tax year Amount (per week) 2026/2027 £241.30 2025/2026 £230.25 2024/2025 £221.20 2023/2024 £203.85 2022/2023 £185.15 2021/2022 £179.60 2020/2021 £175.20 2019/2020 £168.60 2018/2019 £164.35 2017/2018 £159.55 2016/2017 £155.65 The Basic State Pension (before 6 April 2016) Before 6 April 2016, the Basic State Pension comprised the Basic State Pension and the Second State Pension. There was a third, minor, component known as the graduated pension that depended on graduated National Insurance contributions paid by employees while the graduated scheme ran from 1961 to...

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View the related Practice Notes about State Graduated Pension Scheme

PRACTICE NOTES
UK State Pensions: Basic, SERPS/S2P, Graduated and New State Pension: SPA changes, entitlement, qualifying years, NI credits, contracting-out, deferral, overseas uprating and Brexit

Brexit impact The UK ceased to be an EU Member State on exit day, 31 January 2020. Under the Withdrawal Agreement, the state pension and benefit rights of UK nationals residing in the EU, European Economic Area (EEA) or Switzerland are protected. See: Benefits and pensions for UK nationals in the EU, EEA or Switzerland. Likewise, information on the entitlements of EEA and Swiss citizens to UK benefits and state pensions is set out at: Benefits and pensions for EEA and Swiss citizens in the UK. State pensions A state retirement pension depends on an individual’s National Insurance (NI) contribution record and may consist of up to three elements: the basic old age pension the State Second Pension (S2P—formerly the State Earnings Related Pension Scheme, SERPS) the graduated pension Payments are generally made gross, with tax collected through Pay As You Earn (PAYE) against a person’s other income, such as an occupational or private pension. Income tax can also...

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PRACTICE NOTES
April 2017 UK pensions legislative changes: auto-enrolment thresholds, PPF and levy, state/public sector uprating, GMP/contracting-out, pensions advice allowance, Lifetime ISA, judicial/NHS/railway schemes, overseas pensions

Automatic enrolment Automatic Enrolment (Earnings Trigger and Qualifying Earnings Band) Order 2017 Under section 13 of the Pensions Act 2008 (PenA 2008), an individual’s qualifying earnings are those exceeding the amount in subsection (1)(a) and not surpassing the amount in subsection (1)(b). The earnings trigger for automatic enrolment and re-enrolment is the pay level at which employers must automatically place eligible jobholders into a qualifying workplace pension scheme. For money purchase arrangements, the qualifying earnings band identifies the slice of pay on which employers and workers must make at least the minimum contributions. Each tax year, the Secretary of State must review: the automatic enrolment earnings trigger the automatic re-enrolment earnings trigger the qualifying earnings band If the Secretary of State considers that any figures should be altered, they are amended by statutory instrument. Provisions under PenA 2008, sections 14 and 15A, permit, among other matters, increases to the amounts set out in section 13(1)(a) and (b)...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Pensions glossary for family and matrimonial finance lawyers: schemes, tax reliefs, state pension, auto-enrolment, offsetting, PPF, valuation, drawdown and post-2024 lifetime allowance changes

A-day 'A-day' is the widely used term for the broad pension tax 'simplification' reforms that began on 6 April 2006. The changes covered: how much pension contribution was allowed, the kinds of schemes an individual could invest in, the sums that could be taken (and when), and the choices available for any remaining fund. A-day also introduced the annual allowance and the (now abolished) lifetime allowance. See: Annual allowance and Lifetime allowance. AFPS AFPS: Armed forces pension scheme; see Practice Note: Public sector pensions and family proceedings. Accrual rate The speed at which pension benefits build as pensionable service is completed in a final salary scheme, eg 1/60 for each year of pensionable service. Accrued benefits The benefits earned in respect of service up to a specified date. Added years Extra pension provided by adding further years of pensionable service in a salary-related scheme. Such additional years are secured via transfer payments or through additional voluntary contributions/augmentation...

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