Significant Regional Disparities in UK State Pensions
State pensions provide essential retirement income after decades of work and National Insurance contributions. However, payments differ widely across UK regions, with some pensioners receiving thousands more annually than those nearby.
Analysis of official records reveals stark contrasts. Pensioners in the City of London average £12,101 yearly, while those in Newham, London— just eight miles away—receive £9,996. This £2,105 annual gap totals £42,100 over 20 years.
Reasons for Pension Variations
Two pension systems explain the differences, based on age and contribution history. Those reaching pension age before 2016 qualify for the basic state pension, up to £176.45 weekly (£9,175 annually), requiring 30 National Insurance years.
Pensioners since 2016 receive the new state pension, up to £230.25 weekly (£11,973 annually), needing 35 years. Yet older retirees often get more due to additional earnings-related payments like Serps, topping out at £222.10 weekly on the basic amount.
Wealthier areas yield higher averages because higher earners built Serps entitlements. Top payouts cluster in southern England, including the City of London, St Albans, Tandridge, Surrey Heath, and Mole Valley—many near the M25. Aberdeen follows at £228.44 weekly (£11,879 yearly), then Harborough at £228.39 weekly (£11,876 yearly).
Pension expert Tom McPhail notes: “The two-tier state pension for people who had a full working career could result in really quite generous state pensions. Now the new state pension is less generous than those combined double-tier state pensions for those on higher salaries, but more generous to low earners.”
Contracting out to workplace schemes reduced state contributions but boosted private pots, balancing outcomes for many.
Lowest Payout Areas
London hosts extremes: Newham at £9,996 yearly, Tower Hamlets at £10,175. Outside the capital, Leicester averages £10,902, Manchester £10,931, and Slough just over £11,000.
Lower figures tie to incomplete records, unemployment, or migration. Former pensions minister Sir Steve Webb explains: “In areas of high unemployment and low wages, other things being equal, you will see lower state pensions.” He adds that recent arrivals may lack full 35 years, and some women from traditional backgrounds have gaps.
National Insurance credits from Jobseeker’s Allowance, Universal Credit, or Child Benefit count toward the basic pension but not Serps.
Gender Pension Gap
Women, especially older ones, receive less due to career breaks for childcare or relatives, missing Serps boosts. Newham women average £188.09 weekly (£9,781 yearly); Tower Hamlets women aged 75-79 get £8,929—the lowest.
Men over 90 in Chelmsford, Essex, top charts at £14,577 yearly—a £5,648 annual gender gap in some groups, or £112,960 over 20 years.
The new system closes this divide, ignoring earnings. Sir Steve Webb states: “The new state pension, for those who retire after 2016, is based just on the number of years of National Insurance contributions and has nothing to do with wages. A year claiming Child Benefit, or on Universal Credit, is just as good as a year in a well-paid job.”
Boost Your State Pension
Verify your forecast via gov.uk/check-state-pension, the Future Pension Centre (0800 731 0175 if under 66), or Pension Service (0800 731 7898). Review NI records for gaps.
Claim credits for caregiving or benefits. Fill recent gaps (past six years) voluntarily—£923 per year in 2025-26. Six years could add £2,053 annual inflation-linked income.
Defer claiming for increases. Full 35 years ensure maximum under the new system.

