How your exact date of birth will decide if you retire at 66 or 67
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How your exact date of birth will decide if you retire at 66 or 67
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"The state pension age is set to rise this year, meaning millions of workers will have to wait longer for retirement. Increasing from 66 to 67, an individual's exact date of birth will affect when they can start claiming, with some having to delay their retirement by a month compared to someone born just a day earlier. The planned changes have been set since 2014, and will affect men and women equally."
The Independent covers reproductive rights, climate change and Big Tech, and seeks donations to fund on-the-ground reporting while maintaining free access by avoiding paywalls. The outlet relies on supporters who can afford to pay to keep journalism available to everyone. The UK state pension age will increase from 66 to 67 beginning in April, meaning millions of workers will wait longer to claim their state pension. Exact claim dates will vary by date of birth, with some people needing to delay retirement by days or a month compared with someone born a day earlier. The change has been planned since 2014 and applies equally to men and women.
Read at www.independent.co.uk
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