State pension payments begin increasing from Monday, April 6, marking the first full week of the new tax year. The rise does not apply uniformly due to payments made four weeks in arrears on varying weekdays.
Triple Lock Drives 4.8% Headline Increase
The main state pension rates rise by 4.8% under the triple lock mechanism, which selects the highest of inflation, average earnings growth, or 2.5%. Earnings growth in the key measurement month last year determines this year’s uplift.
However, certain components tied to age, marital status, National Insurance record, or deferral increase with CPI inflation at 3.8% from the relevant period.
State Pension Age Rises to 67
The state pension age shifts from 66 to 67 starting in April, impacting new claimants. The transition phases in gradually, adding one month every two months from April 2026 through 2028, creating interim ages of 66 years and 1 to 11 months.
New State Pension (Post-April 2016)
Individuals reaching state pension age from April 2016 qualify for the full flat rate, rising 4.8% from £230.25 to £241.40 weekly—an annual boost of £575 to £12,548.
Eligibility requires 35 qualifying National Insurance years, voluntary top-ups, or credits for caring periods. Contracting out of S2P or Serps may reduce the amount. A minimum of 10 years secures any payment.
Basic State Pension
The basic rate for those reaching pension age from April 2016 increases 4.8% from £176.45 to £184.90 weekly. Many recipients also receive additional state pension, S2P, or Serps from earlier extra contributions.
Other Components Rising with 3.8% Inflation
- Additional State Pension, Serps, or State Second Pension: Increases by 3.8%.
- Protected Payments: For post-2016 retirees with pre-existing entitlements exceeding the flat rate, the excess rises 3.8%.
- Deferred New State Pension: Extra amounts for deferral increase 3.8%.
- Inherited State Pension (Post-2016): Surviving spouses’ or civil partners’ inherited portions rise 3.8%; pre-2016 basic inheritances gain 4.8%.
- Graduated Retirement Benefit (1961-1975): Rises 3.8%.
Additional Basic Rate Pensions
- Married Women’s Rate (Category B): Pre-2016 spouses receive 60% of partner’s basic pension, rising 4.8% from £105.70 to £110.75 weekly.
- Over-80s Rate (Category D): UK residents aged 80+ get £110.77, up 4.8%; higher existing pensions exclude extras. The 25p over-80s addition remains frozen.
The Christmas bonus stays at £10. Full 2026-27 state pension details appear on government resources.
To calculate your payment day, use your National Insurance number and payment schedule. Verify headline rates and applicable add-ons for your April 6 onward entitlement.

