Listener Questions Episode 31
The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast
Pete Matthew
4.9 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 29 October 2025
⏱️ 44 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
A couple of questions this week about having too big a pension fund, plus a great question on platform choice where Rog and Pete discuss their own experiences.
Shownotes: https://meaningfulmoney.tv/QA31
01:58 Question 1
Hi, really enjoying the podcast. Started by watching your YouTube videos and still like getting the notifications of your new content.
I have a question regarding early retirement, before pensions are available.
I'm 50 and my wife is 52 and we would like to retire now.
We have a mix of DB and DC pensions that will be sufficient for our retirement. She can start taking her pensions at 55 and I'll start at 57.
We have a savings pot outside of pensions of £700k in a mixture of investment funds (ISA being maxed yearly) that we would like to live on between now and our pensions becoming available.
Based on £5000 per month to live on, we would need to withdraw £60000 in year 1, year 2 and year 3. After that, we would need to withdraw £32500 in year 4, year 5, year 6 and year 7.
Based on these figures and your experience of the expected interest we should gain over the period if our pot is sensibly invested, what are your thoughts on how low the pot will drop to over the first 7 years and how long would the amount we spent take to recover to the original value of the pot?
Many thanks, Adam
10:39 Question 2
Hi Pete and Roger,
Thank you both for all of the content and guidance – it has really helped me build my confidence in planning my finances.
How much is too much in a pension? I'm 42 years old and have always prioritised pensions as a relatively high earner. I'm now in a position where I have a fairly healthy £530k in my pension, and wondering if I need to throttle back the contributions soon? If I take an assumed 5% growth rate, I'm on target for a £1m pot by age 55 without any more contributions (my access age is protected at 55). Should I just pay in enough to get employer match - I get 7% employer contributions for my 5%? My employer offers salary sacrifice, so as an additional rate taxpayer, I benefit from 47% relief (the employer savings are not shared unfortunately). I do already manage to fill my S&S ISA every year and have an adequate emergency fund, so really it's a question of pension vs GIA at this point. My concern is that I may have to pay 40% tax on withdrawals on the way out, so I might be better to keep the money accessible and support an early retirement before pension access age. What is the maximum pension pot size to target at age 55? – what do you think?
Many thanks and keep up the good work, Steve
15:55 Question 3
Hi Pete and Roger,
Thank you for all you do!
My mum is 63 and retired a few years ago. She has a DC pension, which she won't need to take until she's around 68 as they currently live off my dad's income.
Her pension has been in the default fund, which automatically de-risks as she approaches retirement age. We only recently learned that this default fund probably isn't ideal for her circumstances, when I discovered your podcast and forwarded some episodes to her!
She doesn't intend to buy an annuity, so what can she do with her pension pot at this late stage to stop it being entirely de-risked and losing value as she gets older? She plans to start taking an income from it in around 5 years time.
Many thanks in advance!
Kathryn
22:23 Question 4
Hi Roger and Pete,
Listening to your podcast has me feeling like a money ninja - ready to conquer my finances one episode at a time!
Here`s my question:
My workplace pension match is 3% and I also I contribute 3% - it`s auto enrolment and a DC pension.
I would like to put 15% in my retirement, but can`t find any advice on how to best do that – do I just up my contribution into my workplace pension to 15% and that`s that, or do I also open a SIPP and GIA and split between all three?
What do people usually do? :D
Thanks so much – Leah
27:22 Question 5
Hi Pete and Roger
Been a fan of your podcast for a long time and have put some of the lessons from yourself and others into practice since I was 19, now 46 . Regularly saving and investing as much as possible by way of ISA , high interest accounts etc
I have been able to build a decent portfolio over the years
My question is regarding the most efficient platform for Stock and Shares ISA regarding fees. In the past I had an FA and the ongoing fees I always felt eroded investment gains and switched to Hargreaves Lansdown.
I have a mix between individual shares/funds and trackers totalling £210k with Hargreaves Lansdown.
I have heard about other cheaper platforms such as AJ Bell Trading 212 and wondered if your opinion would be to move over to something cheaper with an in specie transfer.
I remember well the financial crisis and Lost money with the bank ICESAVE, only saved by the then PM Gordon browns decision to reimburse. So although I am attracted , once bitten twice shy for lesser know companies.
My end goal is to scale back or stop work mid 50's
For fullness of info , Pension DC £240k , Cash Isa £30k, House Paid off in Full £550k, Trust £50k No debt , No loans, 2 kids well looked after.
Keep up the good work , that regular saving and diligent invest has worked really well over the long term .. thanks in advance and keep up the great work.
regards Blair
36:11 Question 6
Hi Pete, Roger and Nick!
My question is: when should you stop making additional pension contributions over and above those matching contributions from your employer?
I am 43 and have amassed £450k in defined contribution pensions. For the past few years I have been topping up my contributions to the maximum £60k. But given that I still have 15 years until I will be able to access my pension, I assume with standard growth rates I will have amassed a significant sum even without the extra contributions (the extra is about £33k).
I plan to withdraw approx £50k per year (up to the high rate income tax band) so assuming a 4% withdrawal rate I would need £1.25m at age 58.
Should I just stop contributing the extra now and instead make contributions to my wife's SIPP instead? She has a salary sacrifice pension via work and has headroom to pay more into that pension or a SIPP.
I am at the 62% marginal income tax/NI rate but my wife is a basic rate tax payer. I don't love the idea of paying 62% tax but only getting 28% tax relief (via salary sacrifice) if I do this!
Many thanks, John
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Hi, folks, and welcome to another meaningful money Q&A with me, Pete Matthew. |
| 0:04.0 | And me, Roger Weeks. |
| 0:05.0 | The main man, how you doing, bud? |
| 0:06.0 | Well, I like to think I'm okay, thank you. |
| 0:08.0 | We are in, we're here again. I was going to say something about the shirts, but it doesn't matter because we're probably not going to release the video of this one. Hopefully not. Final test. I think, I think, from episode 32, we're going to put these up. |
| 0:21.0 | So when we- Oh, jolly jolly. |
| 0:22.0 | And then you're very excited about the... from episode 32, we're going to put these up. Oh, jolly jolly. |
| 0:21.6 | And then you're very excited about the internet, seeing how handsome you are. |
| 0:26.6 | Yeah, well, I'm afraid to have all the mail that will come through the mail. |
| 0:31.6 | The fan mail. |
| 0:32.6 | Well, people might pay you extra to show them your feet or something. |
| 0:35.6 | You go, well, if it works, I'm quite happy to do stuff. |
| 0:39.3 | Exactly. |
| 0:40.0 | Anything to boost the retirement coffers? |
| 0:42.0 | Yeah, don't right. |
| 0:42.5 | I'm not paid enough. |
| 0:45.7 | What are we talking about? |
| 0:46.9 | Let's move on swiftly, shall we? |
| 0:48.4 | Well, it's one of those real mix of interesting questions this week. |
| 0:51.7 | And just goes to prove what fascinating financial lives we both leave. Yeah. And all the listeners. And all the listeners. Yeah. So how clever the listeners are, actually, as well. They are. So where did they send the questions? Hmm. You need to send you questions to hello at meaningfulmoney.tv with the subject line podcast question. I will try to put them in a future episode for you. We will. Maybe a little while into the future, so just bear that in mind. We've got a couple. Nick has started marking them now. Need to answer this in 2025. So, you know, if it's urgent, then let us know. And we'll try and bump it up, but then cause everybody will. So will so that might not work but anyway if we talk about any notes or links in today's show they will be |
| 1:32.3 | at the show notes meaningfulmoney.tv slash qa 31 for question and answers episode 31 see what we did |
| 1:38.2 | there good meaningfulmoney.tv slash qa 31 do you want to kick off with Question 1, Rush? |
... |
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