Pension-Led Funding: Using Your Pension to Finance Your Business

James Porter
Finance Specialist · Nov 13, 2026 · 8 min read
Pension-led funding (PLF) is a specialist finance technique that allows business owners to use their own pension funds (typically through a SSAS or SIPP) to invest in or lend money to their own business. For owner-directors with substantial pension funds who want to deploy that capital productively within their business, PLF can be a tax-efficient and cost-effective alternative to conventional borrowing. But the regulatory and compliance requirements are complex and must be managed carefully.
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How pension-led funding works
The most common PLF structure involves a Small Self-Administered Scheme (SSAS), which is a pension scheme typically set up for a director and key employees. The SSAS can make a loan to the sponsoring employer (the director's company) of up to 50% of the pension fund's net value. This loan must be at a commercial rate of interest, secured against business assets, and have a maximum term of five years.
The business pays interest on the SSAS loan, which is paid into the pension tax-efficiently. At the end of the loan term, the principal is repaid to the SSAS. The net effect is that the business has accessed capital from the pension, repaid it with interest, and the interest payments have gone into the pension rather than to a third-party lender.
Tax efficiency of pension-led funding
The tax efficiency of PLF comes from the fact that interest paid by the business to the SSAS is a tax-deductible expense for the business, while interest received by the SSAS grows tax-free within the pension wrapper. In an owner-managed business where the director controls both the business and the SSAS, the interest effectively moves from a taxable entity to a tax-free entity.
The pension fund can also hold commercial property that is leased to the business. This is a separate but related structure where the SSAS owns the freehold of the trading premises, the business leases them from the SSAS, and rent is paid into the pension tax-efficiently. Combined, PLF and property-held-in-pension structures can represent very significant tax planning opportunities.
"Pension-led funding moves interest payments from the company to the pension fund - from a taxable entity to a tax-free one. For owner-managers, this is genuinely compelling."
- James Porter, Finance Specialist
Risks and regulatory requirements
PLF is subject to complex HMRC and regulatory oversight. The loan must be at a commercial interest rate (typically 1% above the Bank of England base rate as a minimum), must be properly secured, and must be genuinely repayable from the business. Schemes that do not meet these conditions can result in the scheme being treated as unauthorised by HMRC, with severe tax penalties.
SSAS pension schemes require a professional pensioner trustee alongside the member directors. The costs of establishing and running a SSAS (typically £2,000-£5,000 per year in professional fees) must be weighed against the benefits. For businesses with pension funds above £250,000 and a genuine lending need, the economics usually justify the structure.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can any director access pension-led funding?
Only directors with an eligible pension scheme (typically a SSAS). Defined benefit pensions cannot be used for PLF. The pension fund must have sufficient assets to make the loan - typically at least £100,000 for a meaningful facility.
What interest rate must a SSAS charge on a business loan?
At minimum 1% above Bank of England base rate, currently putting the minimum rate at around 6%. The rate must be set at a level that HMRC would consider commercial.
Is pension-led funding regulated in the UK?
Yes. SSAS schemes are regulated by The Pensions Regulator, and the investments within them must comply with HMRC's rules for registered pension schemes. Specialist pension advisers registered with The Pensions Regulator should be used.
The bottom line
Pension-led funding is not suitable for all businesses or all directors, but for those it suits, it provides a tax-efficient source of capital that complements conventional business lending. Specialist advice from a qualified pension adviser and tax specialist is essential before implementation. Spark Finance can refer UK business owners to specialists in pension-led funding structures.
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