Allow State Pension to be passed to children, long-term partners, and dependents

We ask the Government to change State Pension inheritance rules so that individuals can nominate a beneficiary such as their child, long-term cohabiting partner, or carer – or offer them a lump sum – so it is not just a spouse or civil partner inheriting from the pension as at present.

580 Signatures

Status
Open
Opened
Tuesday 19th August 2025
Last 24 hours signatures
23
Signature Deadline
Thursday 19th February 2026
Estimated Final Signatures: 2,881

Reticulating Splines

You may be interested in these active petitions

1. Give State Pension to all at 60 and increase it to equal 48hrs of Living Wage - 8,859 signatures
2. Allow British Citizens by Descent to upgrade their citizenship - 3,052 signatures
3. Recognise Palestine as a State and seek immediate ceasefire in Gaza - 15,622 signatures
4. Allow Parliament to remove the London Mayor - 38,422 signatures
5. Legislate to mandate offer of electronic pension transfers and higher standards - 2,533 signatures

State Pension benefits can only be inherited by a spouse/civil partner. Unmarried partners, adult children, or other dependents are excluded, even if financially dependent. Many may support adult children with disabilities, or are cared for by someone other than a spouse or civil partner.

We believe in having a system that recognises real-world relationships and dependency; allowing people to nominate a beneficiary, or offer a lump sum to dependents, could help protect vulnerable loved ones from financial hardship after bereavement.


Petition Signatures over time

Constituency Data

Reticulating Splines