Why choose an International Pension/SIPP
One issue that many British expatriates only discover years after leaving the UK is that a large number of UK pension providers are not designed to service non-UK residents.
By Chris Burke
This article is published on: 3rd June 2026
One issue that many British expatriates only discover years after leaving the UK is that a large number of UK pension providers are not designed to service non-UK residents.
Many standard UK pension companies:
In some cases, providers may even refuse to continue administering the pension altogether once the member is permanently resident abroad.
This is becoming increasingly common since Brexit and the UK no longer being part of the EU. Many UK pension providers have become more cautious about servicing clients resident in European countries due to additional cross-border regulatory requirements, licensing restrictions, and compliance obligations.
As a result, some providers have reduced or completely withdrawn services for non-UK residents, particularly those living within the EU and EEA. This has left many expatriates needing to transfer their pensions to internationally focused providers that are properly structured to support overseas clients.
This wider trend has been driven by:
For many expatriates, the result is the same:
For retirees depending on pension income abroad, this can create serious financial and administrative difficulties.

Both for Withdrawals and Pension Management
Many UK-based pension providers were built primarily for UK residents and domestic advisers. Once a member relocates overseas permanently — particularly to countries such as Spain, Portugal, France, the UAE, or Thailand — the provider may no longer wish to maintain the relationship.
This can leave expatriates with very limited options:
In practice, many non-UK residents eventually have little choice but to move their pension to a provider specifically set up for international clients. However, if this has been “left as it was” for many years, this could have serious consequences.
Pension Management
Many people I speak to know they have a UK pension (or pensions), but many are not aware of the following:
All of these factors can have a very significant impact on pension performance and, in real terms over many years, on the amount eventually received in retirement.
As an example, some people approach me with a pension at perhaps age 55 and are not planning on retiring until 65, yet their UK pension has automatically been placed into a “pre-retirement” strategy by the pension company.
In essence, this means a much more cautious investment approach, which in the short term may be ideal for someone about to retire. However, if you are still 10 years away from retirement, this will normally mean substantially lower long-term returns for the pension overall.
And all of this can happen without the client fully realising it had been done. Technically, it may have been disclosed within the standard terms and conditions, but it was not actively identified or discussed with the individual.

International SIPP providers are generally structured specifically to support expatriates and internationally mobile retirees.
They are experienced in dealing with:
This means clients can continue to:
For many expatriates, moving to an International SIPP is not only about tax efficiency or currency flexibility — it is often about maintaining reliable long-term access to their pension while living abroad.
It can also make a dramatic difference to the amount of retirement income ultimately received, both from a tax-efficiency perspective and from improved investment management over time.
Sometimes clarity starts with a conversation.
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