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Half of UK adults have a ‘side hustle’ but only 5% pay any into a pension

Press
15
Jun 2026
Press

Just 5% of the UK’s growing cohort of side hustlers save any of their earnings into a pension, despite new PensionBee research showing that doing so throughout your working life could boost  your retirement pot by up to £154,000. 

The UK’s side hustle economy has reached record highs. Almost half (49%) of UK adults surveyed reported that they have a side hustle, with a further 12% having had one in the last two years (table 2). For most, the amounts involved are modest, with 81% of side hustlers earning less than £500 a month from their side activity (table 3). 

Extra income - but rarely into retirement

The extra income is rarely being put to work for the long term. The top uses of side hustle earnings are day-to-day living costs (39%) and treating themselves (31%), followed by building up savings (23%) and paying off debt (19%) (table 4). Paying into a pension came last, with just 5% of side hustlers using their earnings to top up their retirement savings.

Asked why they don't contribute, a quarter (25%) said they already have a pension through their main job and don't feel they need to do anything extra (table 5). This could be a costly misconception, given that just 9% of working age Brits are on track for a comfortable retirement on current Auto-Enrolment minimums. A further 22% said they can't afford to contribute as everything goes on essentials, and 20% said their side hustle income is too unpredictable to commit to regular contributions.

The £154,000 opportunity

PensionBee modelling shows the scale of what is being left on the table. Saving the equivalent of the £1,000 annual tax-free trading allowance - a tax exemption that lets you earn up to £1,000 of gross income per tax year from small side hustles, hobbies, or casual jobs completely tax-free - into a personal pension could grow to over £154,000 by retirement.

Table 1The power of investing your trading allowance sum
Age starting Annual contribution (excl. tax relief) Projected extra pension at age 67 (in today's money)
25£1,000£154,000
35£1,000£91,000
45£1,000£49,000
55£1,000£22,000
65£1,000£4,000

Projections assume 5% net annual investment return, a 0.7% annual management charge, 25% basic-rate tax relief on contributions, 2% annual inflation, retirement at age 67. Figures are rounded and stated in today's money.

Maike Currie, VP Personal Finance at PensionBee, commented:

"For millions of people, a side hustle has become a lifeline against the rising cost of living, but the extra income is too often swallowed up by day-to-day spending or held in places that won't deliver the long-term growth a pension can. This is a missed opportunity for building much-needed retirement wealth. 

“Arguably, the most worrying finding is that a quarter of side hustlers believe their workplace pension alone will be enough. The reality is that Auto-Enrolment minimums are not enough to fund a comfortable retirement while millions of 'invisible' workers - including carers and the self-employed - are excluded from the system altogether. 

"PensionBee is calling for reform that reflects how people actually work today, including expanding Auto-Enrolment to cover lower earners and using Self-Assessment to nudge the self-employed to start saving. In the meantime, anyone with a side hustle should take control today by opening a personal pension and making the most of the valuable government top up in the form of tax relief available on contributions. Even modest amounts redirected each month can compound into substantial sums by the time you stop working."

Four tips for side hustlers saving for retirement

  1. Open a personal pension or SIPP. These can be set up online in minutes, with no employer required.
  2. Claim the tax relief. For every £80 a basic-rate taxpayer contributes to a pension, the government adds £20, turning it into £100. Higher and additional-rate taxpayers can usually claim even more tax relief through Self Assessment. 
  3. Set up a regular monthly contribution. A small amount paid in consistently can mean contributions are still possible even if your side hustle income is irregular. 
  4. Use the 31 January tax deadline as a nudge. If you’re already filing Self-Assessment, it’s a natural moment to think about what comes next for that income.

Notes to editors

Data based on a nationally representative survey of 1,000 UK adults, June 2026.

Table 2Do you currently have, or have you had in the last two years, a side hustle (work you do outside of your main job) to earn extra money?
Answer % of respondents
Yes, I currently have a side hustle49%
No39%
Yes, I had one in the last two years but stopped12%
Table 3Roughly how much do you earn from your side hustle per month on average?
Answer % of respondents
Less than £10050%
£100–£49931%
£500–£99910%
£1,000–£1,9994%
£2,000 or more2%
It varies too much to say2%
Table 4Thinking about the money you earn from your side hustle, what do you mainly use it for? (Select up to three options)
Answer % of respondents
Day-to-day living costs (e.g. food, bills, rent)39%
Treating myself (e.g. holidays, clothes, eating out)31%
Building up a savings account23%
Paying off debt19%
I spend it as it comes in without a specific plan17%
Saving for a specific goal (e.g. a house deposit)14%
Investing (e.g. stocks and shares, ISA)10%
Paying into a pension5%

Multi-select question: respondents could choose up to three options, so figures do not sum to 100%.

Table 5If you don't currently put any side-hustle earnings into a pension, why not?
Answer % of respondents
I already have a pension through my main job, so I don't think I need to do anything extra25%
I can't afford to – the money goes on essentials22%
I feel like my side-hustle income is too unpredictable to commit to regular contributions20%
I spend the money on other things and don't think about it14%
I plan to, but haven't got round to it12%
A pension seems too difficult or confusing to set up5%
Other / prefer not to say2%

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