Corporate plan 2026 to 2027
On this page
- Message from the Chair and the CEO
- 1. Scheme governance
- 2. Value for money
- 3. Retirement
- 4. An efficient and effective TPR
Message from the Chair and CEO
Workplace pensions are central to the UK’s social and economic fabric. They shape people’s living standards in retirement and have the potential to support sustainable economic growth.
The system is at a pivotal point. 15 million people are currently not on track for a sustainable income in retirement, which is too high. Consolidation is accelerating and reforms are reshaping expectations of value and governance. At the same time, the landscape is becoming more complex, data-driven, and interconnected.
Ongoing reform, including the Pension Schemes Act 2026 and the work of the Pensions Commission, aims to raise standards, improve value for money, and support better retirement outcomes. Delivering this ambition will require a strong partnership between government, industry and regulators.
This Corporate Plan sets out how we will play our part over the year ahead, focusing on where we can have the greatest impact for members: raising governance standards, driving value for money, and improving sustainable outcomes at retirement.
We will regulate in a proportionate, data‑led way, prioritising our efforts where risks are greatest. We do this to protect members’ money, enhance the pensions system, and support innovation and growth in members’ interests.
We will also continue to strengthen The Pensions Regulator (TPR) itself – improving how we use data and technology and behavioural insights, building the skills we need for a changing pensions landscape, and working closely with government, industry and our regulatory partners.
This Corporate Plan sits alongside our new Corporate Strategy, anchored in our long-term vision: people have a sustainable income in retirement, supported by a pensions system that provides security and value for all.
This plan sets out the next steps towards that goal.
A system changed, but more to do
Workplace pensions have changed significantly. Automatic enrolment has brought millions more people into the system, defined benefit (DB) pensions are now more secure, and consolidation has created larger schemes with stronger governance and greater investment capability. Together, these developments provide a strong foundation for people having a sustainable income in retirement.
Yet challenges remain. Around 15 million working-age people are not on track to have enough money to live on in retirement, and outcomes remain uneven across the workforce, reflecting differences in earnings, working patterns and participation rates.
Risks intensify at retirement
These challenges become most acute as people approach retirement. Members are often faced with complex choices, limited default options and an increased risk of scams. Poor decisions or weak protections at this stage can significantly undermine the outcomes people get.
A consolidating and more demanding market
The structure of the pensions market is changing rapidly. Consolidation is accelerating across both defined contribution and defined benefit schemes, leading to a marketplace of fewer, larger and more commercial schemes. Scale can bring real benefits, including stronger governance, better administration and access to a wider range of investments.
However, it also raises expectations. Schemes must provide value for money – and demonstrate high standards of operational resilience, data quality, cyber security and professionalism. Where schemes cannot meet these expectations, timely improvement or consolidation is essential to protect members.
A pivotal year for reform and regulation
The government’s programme of pensions reform is reshaping the system. At the same time, schemes are operating in a more complex environment, with greater reliance on third‑party providers, increased use of data, digital and AI‑enabled tools, and heightened exposure to market, climate and geopolitical risks.
Actions now will shape outcomes for years to come. This Corporate Plan sets out how we will focus our efforts over the year ahead to raise governance standards, drive value for money, improve outcomes at retirement and strengthen our efficiency and effectiveness as a modern regulator.
Our priorities for the year ahead
Last year’s Corporate Plan reaffirmed our focus on trusteeship standards, investment governance, and value for money. Building on this foundation, we have set four priorities that will guide our work for the year ahead:
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Scheme governance: to raise the quality of scheme governance and administration.
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Value for money: to enhance the value for money that people experience throughout their pensions journey whatever their scheme.
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Retirement: to ensure members are confident entering retirement and can transition smoothly into products that provide a sustainable income in later life.
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An efficient and effective TPR: to further strengthen TPR as a modern, behaviourally informed, capable and data-driven regulator.
These priorities focus on where we can have the greatest impact now for members and the market. They are designed to make tangible progress towards our longer-term strategic outcomes: keeping pensions secure; improving value; ensuring fairness; making sure that schemes are well run; building a sustainable and resilient pensions market; and supporting a more seamless and integrated system.
Taken together, the priorities and outcomes in this plan create the conditions needed to deliver our long-term vision: that people have a sustainable income in retirement, supported by a pensions system that provides security and value for all.
To deliver this vision we will work with our partners, particularly with the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) with whom we share responsibility for regulating different kinds of pensions.
For each priority, this plan defines the corporate outcomes to be achieved (these are the intermediate, shorter-term outcomes that show we are successfully progressing our longer-term strategic outcomes), alongside the key delivery activities that will drive each corporate outcome and the metrics that will demonstrate progress and impact.
This work incorporates our focus on supporting economic growth where this is in members’ interests and includes unlocking long-term productive investment, reducing unnecessary regulatory burden, and increasing confidence in the pensions system.
We report separately on key performance indicators (KPIs) agreed with No. 10 and HM Treasury as part of our commitment to supporting sustainable long-term growth across the UK economy.
Alongside our corporate plan, we are also publishing a roadmap of TPR activity to deliver the Pension Schemes Act 2026.
1. Scheme governance
Strong governance and administration are essential to good member outcomes. In 2026 to 2027, we will strengthen expectations, target our regulatory effort where risk is highest, and drive improvement where it matters most for members.
Scheme governance: our plan for 2026 to 2027
| Corporate outcome | Key deliverables | Corporate metric |
|---|---|---|
| Trusteeship: Trustees have the awareness, understanding and capability needed to apply effective scheme governance in line with the new governance approach, enabling schemes to make consistent, informed decisions that drive better outcomes and support growth in members’ interests. |
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Self‑reported confidence in Board capability (%). |
| Administration: Improved scheme administration is enabled by evidence‑based regulatory insight that supports clearer expectations, effective oversight and targeted intervention. |
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Self‑reported arrangements for working with administrators (%). |
| Dashboards: Industry is prepared for compliance with pensions dashboards connection and data duties. |
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Percentage of pension providers and schemes connected to pensions dashboards. |
| Public service schemes: TPR’s evidence-based understanding of public service scheme risks enables more effective, targeted oversight and improved protection. |
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LGPS schemes self-reporting adequate processes in place for key/all-risk areas (%). |
| Targeted enforcement: Enforcement approach implementation enables targeted enforcement that tackles the key risks and harms to members. |
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Our enforcement approach in place, and data led enforcement capability deployed in agreed timeframe, alongside the development of a baseline metric to measure impact. |
| Risk-based regulation: TPR deploys proportionate, data‑driven regulation to focus effort where risks are greatest, reducing unnecessary burden while maintaining high compliance. |
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The common supervisory framework and risk assessment model are implemented, demonstrating regulatory effort is directed at the highest risks in the system. |
2. Value for money
Value for money is critical to delivering sustainable retirement incomes. In 2026–27, we will embed stronger value expectations, drive consolidation where schemes fall short, and support scale and investment that improve outcomes for members.
Our value for money plan for 2026-27
| Corporate outcome | Key deliverables | Corporate metrics |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory framework: Improve value for members by working with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to enhance the regulatory framework. |
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Value for money regulatory framework for trust-based schemes delivered to an agreed timeline. |
| Consolidation and scale: The market consolidates into fewer, larger schemes, able to harness the full range of investment opportunities, offering better value for money and quality defaults. This supports UK growth and delivers improved returns to members. |
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Scheme consolidation rate (%). |
| DB surplus: Well-funded schemes can unlock surplus to benefit members, employers and the UK economy. |
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DB schemes progress towards low dependency funding. |
| Small pots: Support small pension pots consolidation to improve value for members, working with the DWP to develop a regulatory framework. |
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Engagement with the DWP on small pots framework to agreed requirements and timescales. |
| Superfunds: A stable and growing superfund market provides a viable consolidation vehicle for DB schemes, supporting a sustainable DB market structure. |
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Number of superfunds and membership. |
| Automatic enrolment: Employers maintain high levels of compliance, ensuring members receive the contributions they are entitled to, supported by efficient regulatory processes that reduce burden. |
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Employers compliant with their automatic enrolment/re-enrolment duties (%). |
3. Retirement
Too many members face complexity and risk as they approach retirement. In 2026 to 2027, we will help shape a system that supports better choices, safer pathways and more sustainable retirement incomes.
Retirement: our plan for 2026 to 2027
| Corporate outcome | Key deliverables | Corporate metrics |
|---|---|---|
| Retirement pathways: Defined contributions (DC) members have access to suitable, sustainable decumulation solutions that deliver a regular income. |
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Engagement with the DWP on guided retirement framework to agreed requirements and timescales. |
| Collective defined contribution (CDC): CDC providers understand how to apply and are assessed for authorisation through a clear, timely, and consistent process, supporting a viable CDC market that offers employers risk‑sharing options and delivers secure and sustainable outcomes. |
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Demonstrate readiness for CDC authorisations by August 2026. |
| Scams: Mitigate the harms from pension scams activity, evidenced by increased scams disruptions and a decrease in reported scam-related losses and victim numbers. |
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Percentage of illicit websites (detected by the Scams Identification Dashboard (SID)) taken down. |
4. An efficient and effective TPR
Effective regulation depends on a strong, modern regulator. As a modern regulator, TPR will also play an active role internationally, contributing to global regulatory discussions and sharing best practise on common challenges.
In 2026 to 2027, we will focus our resources where risk is greatest, improve how we use data and technology, and ensure strong governance and value for money in how we operate.
An efficient and effective TPR: our plan for 2026 to 2027
| Corporate outcome | Key deliverables | Metrics |
|---|---|---|
| Organisational health: TPR ensures its organisational health and resilience through efficient and effective systems, an agile, capable, and motivated workforce, and resilience in the event of incidents or outages. |
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Overall running costs. Employee satisfaction (staff survey results). |
| Accountability: TPR operates in full compliance with its framework agreement, Managing Public Money guidance and Accounting Officer responsibilities, ensuring proper use of public funds and accountability to Parliament. |
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Compliance with TPR's framework agreement, Managing Public Money guidance and Accounting Officer responsibilities |
Our funding is derived from two main sources: a grant-in-aid from the DWP to fund our Pensions Act 2004 duties (levy-funded activities) and a separate grant-in-aid from general taxation relating to the automatic enrolment duties arising from Pensions Act 2008.
The budget for 2026 to 2027 is £119.2 million (excluding 2026 pay remit).