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.

781 Signatures

Status
Open
Opened
Tuesday 19th August 2025
Last 24 hours signatures
1
Signature Deadline
Thursday 19th February 2026
Estimated Final Signatures: 870

Reticulating Splines

You may be interested in these active petitions

1. Allow people to be eligible for both state pension and full carer's allowance - 6,618 signatures
2. Increase New State Pension and pay to all, abolish the old Basic State Pension. - 2,349 signatures
3. Give State Pension to all at 60 and increase it to equal 48hrs of Living Wage - 19,706 signatures
4. Introduce a Pension Tax Lock to help protect retirement savings and incentives - 22,105 signatures
5. Allow parents to take their children out of school for up to 10 days fine free. - 2,245 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