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UK State Pension Frozen in Many Countries But NOT in the Philippines – Here’s Why

Frozen vs unfrozen pension
Wise International Money Transfers NE

If you’re a Brit living overseas, one of the biggest surprises can be discovering that your UK State Pension doesn’t always rise with inflation. In some countries it does — in others, it’s frozen for life.

So why the difference? It all comes down to international agreements.

The UK only pays annual increases — known as “uprating” — in places where there’s a legal treaty or reciprocal arrangement that specifically says so. If you retire to the EU, Switzerland, or certain countries like the USA, Jamaica, or the Philippines, your UK State Pension goes up each April. But if you live in Canada, Australia, or Thailand, it stays fixed at the rate you first received it.

Why the Philippines Is Different

The Philippines is a rare success story. Thanks to the UK–Philippines Convention on Social Security, which came into force in December 1989, pensions paid there receive the same annual increases as those in the UK.

That didn’t happen by accident. The Philippines pushed for a strong deal to protect its Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) — tens of thousands of whom have long contributed to Britain’s National Insurance system, especially in the NHS and care sectors. Their collective presence and economic contribution gave both governments a reason to include annual uprating in the treaty.

So, if you’re a former NHS nurse or worker who returns home to retire in the Philippines, your UK State Pension will keep rising with inflation — unlike in most of Asia.

The Broader Picture

Other countries weren’t so lucky. Canada, Australia, and New Zealand all have social security agreements with the UK, but none include pension increases. The result is two people with identical National Insurance histories ending up with very different outcomes, simply depending on where they retire.

The UK government’s position is clear: uprating only happens where there’s a legal obligation or reciprocal agreement. Extending it worldwide would cost billions, and no government so far has been willing to take that step.

The Takeaway

If you’re planning to retire abroad, check the official GOV.UK list of countries where the UK State Pension is uprated before you move. It could make a huge difference to your long-term income.

The Philippines shows what’s possible when a country negotiates well — a model that many others might wish they had followed.

Sources:
• GOV.UK – list of countries with uprated UK State Pensions
• UK–Philippines Convention on Social Security (1989) – sss.gov.ph
• Hansard – parliamentary record confirming annual increases from December 1989
• House of Commons Library – data on Filipino NHS staffing
• GOV.UK – UK State Pension qualifying years (10-year minimum)

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3 responses to “UK State Pension Frozen in Many Countries But NOT in the Philippines – Here’s Why”

  1. Raymond Small avatar
    Raymond Small

    I wrote a lengthy letter at your website from my tablet but the software swallowed it, disappointed, ouch!

    This is the scaled back version. I have lived in the Philippines, this time, for six years straight on a 13A. I have been an item with my darling, GF, Fiancé and wife for fifteen years and happy I am. I am 72 this Christmas and I want my affairs in order so when I kick the bucket; hence, my darling is not left in a financial quagmire of chaos.

    I still have a home in England, our family home, my childhood home, which I rent to a decent couple at nowhere near local current rent but everyone is happy. However, owning a property with those mad-dog Fabians, which make up half the Starmer’s cabinet, is not a joy, they just keep loading more and more requirements on small landlord with giant fines. Even Chancellor Reeves, who voted for council licensing of small landlords (non-HMO), was stung. A little off topic, how can Generation Rent campaign for NI 8% addition and tax on rent, then not expect LL,s not to pass this on in part or full to tenants? Madness!

    I receive the state OAP not full, a small civil service pension and a rental income.

    With HMRC is using AI to scan any and all financial records and even social media and soon banks must link accounts with NI numbers. I am expecting interesting times with HMRC, thus I have engaged an account nice chap …

    Because, until recent times we moved about I never informed DWP of my new addresses very month or so because they cannot handle that – it confuses them. Furthermore, the state OAP is the same here so no genuine financial fraud/gain made.

    I am interested in this elusive document from BIR you mentioned. If you would be so kind as to give me a copy of the information you hold, I would be grateful. I shall ride up to Dumaguete BIR, investigate, later I shall report back to you whatever I discover, whether neg or pos.

    At the moment, I am somewhat unknown to HMRC as I left Britain in good order; however, since 2000 living and working in Indonesia, Korea and Japan. Now, I must decide my residency. I am healthy so to returning to my sister’s place and carry out her extensive list of building maintenance is not a great burden at present but over time who knows what might happen to one’s health.

    Yours sincerely, Ray

  2. Andrew avatar

    Hi Ray, the document you refer to is HMRC Double Taxation: Treaty Relief (Form DT-Individual). It can be downloaded from the HMRC website.
    Here is a link you can use/paste into your browser: https://tinyurl.com/5n98hs72
    HOWEVER – It’s a futile exercise as no BIR department is authorised to stamp this form (required before returning to HRMC).
    The “Dual Taxation agreement” is in force to stop “Double Taxation” in both countries – which is NOT applicable to the Philippines as they do NOT tax your income. Hence any attempt to get BIR to sign this form is pointless. There was a directive circulated to all BIR outlets some years ago.
    Should you by some miraculous good fortune get this form authorised by the BIR, do let me know. I lived in Dumaguete years ago and the BIR is up to speed. They are used to expats, so I don’t hold much hope for you, but good luck!

    1. Raymond Small avatar
      Raymond Small

      Thanks for the information. When I have sorted my tax muddle and reach this point – Treaty Relief (Form DT-Individual) I shall give it a whirle. Naturally, I will report back to you.
      It is silly for BIR to refuse to sign the document as it is more money entering the local economy, tax for BIR, and hard currency for the Senteral Bank Philippines.
      The accountant seems to be of the opinion, better outside the country than in.
      I have a small house, as I explained above, but it has now come to a point in my life I do not want the responsiblity of it; therefore, from a selling position might be better as the HMRC will only claim CGT* from 2015 when taxation regulation change for overseas landlords and general sellers, not Tony Blair because he bought his offices in London offshore.
      If I sell the house what to do the proceeds? Every stockmarket in the West is massively over priced with stupid P/E. Money in the bank yelds less than inflation; moreover, most banks are unsafe with sour off books loans.
      On a brighter note, while I was working I use to buy my wife an oz of gold per year for her pension, I teased, but it has performed very well. A correction is happening then it’s off to the moon.
      Well that’s it.
      Thank you very much.
      Regards, Ray.
      *CGT is a tax on inflation the government and banks have caused.

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