Irish pension tax relief explained (2026)
Pension contributions are one of the most powerful tax-saving tools available to workers in Ireland. Contributions attract income tax relief at your marginal rate — meaning money that would otherwise go to Revenue goes directly into your retirement fund instead.
Age-related contribution limits
Revenue sets the maximum percentage of your earnings you can contribute and receive tax relief on. The older you are, the higher the limit — recognising that older workers have less time to save.
| Age | Max contribution (% of earnings) | Max on €115,000 earnings cap |
|---|---|---|
| Under 30 | 15% | €17,250 |
| 30–39 | 20% | €23,000 |
| 40–49 | 25% | €28,750 |
| 50–54 | 30% | €34,500 |
| 55–59 | 35% | €40,250 |
| 60 and over | 40% | €46,000 |
How tax relief works
Relief is applied at your highest (marginal) rate of income tax — either 20% or 40%. There is no relief on USC or PRSI. For higher-rate taxpayers, every €100 contributed to a pension costs just €60 in real terms. For standard-rate taxpayers it costs €80.
Standard Fund Threshold (2026)
The Standard Fund Threshold (SFT) is the lifetime limit on tax-advantaged pension savings. For 2026, it has increased to €2.2 million (up from €2 million in 2025). It will continue rising to €2.8 million by 2029. Pension funds above this limit face a 40% chargeable excess tax when benefits are taken.
Tax-free lump sum at retirement
On retirement, you can take up to 25% of your pension fund as a tax-free lump sum, subject to a lifetime limit of €200,000. Amounts between €200,001 and €500,000 are taxed at 20%, and amounts above €500,000 are taxed at your marginal rate plus USC and PRSI. Note: this 25% rule applies to PRSAs and personal pensions. Occupational pension schemes may use a different salary and service-based formula — check with your pension provider or a financial adviser.
State Pension
The State Pension (Contributory) is currently payable from age 66 and is €15,564 per year (€299.30 per week) in 2026, following a €10/week increase in Budget 2026. It is separate from private pensions and cannot be taken early. Entitlement depends on your PRSI contribution record.
Types of pension in Ireland
- Occupational pension scheme — set up by your employer; contributions deducted from payroll
- PRSA (Personal Retirement Savings Account) — flexible, portable, suitable for employees and self-employed
- Personal pension / RAC — mainly for self-employed; contributions claimed via tax return
- AVC (Additional Voluntary Contribution) — top-up contributions to an occupational scheme
- Auto-enrolment — Ireland's new workplace auto-enrolment pension scheme (scheduled to roll out)