Jonathan Guthrie Flags 10 Retirement Numbers for Britons, From 85-Year Longevity to 8% Pension Contributions
Updated
Updated · Financial Times · Jun 6
Jonathan Guthrie Flags 10 Retirement Numbers for Britons, From 85-Year Longevity to 8% Pension Contributions
1 articles · Updated · Financial Times · Jun 6
Summary
Ten figures frame Guthrie’s retirement-planning guide for Britons, led by average longevity of 85 for a 65-year-old and a 3.8% median drawdown rate on pension pots above £250,000.
A 50% target replacement rate and the £12,548 state pension are presented as core planning anchors, though Guthrie warns not to rely on the triple lock and notes the state pension age reaches 67 after March 2028.
The guide argues the 8% auto-enrolment minimum is too low for a comfortable retirement: a 30-year-old on £40,000 contributing the minimum might get just under £10,000 a year, versus about 17% contributions for a two-thirds salary target.
It also highlights risks often misjudged in household planning, including a 4-in-10 divorce rate by the 25th anniversary, a gender pension gap, 2.8% inflation and a relatively low 2.4% care-home incidence.
Guthrie closes with broader behavioural advice: many retirees still hold 60% of peak wealth at 90, over-prepare financially, and report a mean happiness score of 7.6 out of 10 after age 65.