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By choosing to put off claiming your State Pension you may get extra State Pension. Before you decide whether to defer, find out more about the benefits of extra State Pension and how it affects inheritance, tax and other benefits.
If you choose to put off claiming your State Pension you may be able to get extra State Pension when you do claim it. You must put off your claim for at least five weeks.
For every five weeks you put off claiming you can earn an increase to your State Pension of one per cent. This is equivalent to about 10.4 per cent extra for every full year you put off claiming. You can benefit by putting off claiming your State Pension for as little as five weeks.
Extra State Pension is paid on top of your normal weekly State Pension. It continues for as long as you are getting State Pension. Extra State Pension is normally increased each April.
If you choose extra State Pension when you defer, it will be treated like any other income when working out any benefits you maybe receiving. These include:
If you have put off claiming your State Pension then some days will not count towards building up any extra State Pension, for example:
This will only apply if you are living with the person getting the dependency increase, unless they are your husband or wife.
These benefits include:
You won’t build up extra State Pension for any days you are in prison.
From April 2011, any days that you or your partner receive any of the following benefits will not count towards any extra State Pension:
Days that you receive Graduated Retirement Benefit or Shared Additional Pension will count towards an extra State Pension.
Your extra State Pension is counted as income for tax purposes in the same way as your State Pension.
If you die while you are putting off your State Pension, your widow, widower or surviving civil partner may be entitled to extra State Pension. This would take effect when they claim their own State Pension.
Your widow, widower or surviving civil partner may get extra State Pension added to their own State Pension after your death. This could happen if you had already claimed your State Pension and chosen extra State Pension before your death.
The amount of extra State Pension payable to a widow, widower or surviving civil partner will be based on:
You can’t claim extra State Pension from your husband’s, wife’s or civil partner’s National Insurance contributions if both the following apply:
You can’t claim extra State Pension from your wife’s or civil partner’s National Insurance contributions if both the following apply:
If you put off claiming your State Pension, you can choose to claim a lump sum payment instead of extra State Pension.
Follow the link below for information on the lump sum payment.
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