Employers failing to inform near retirees of options

Employers failing to inform near retirees of options

On the three year anniversary of the abolition of the Default Retirement Age (DRA), a new report from Jelf Employee Benefits and retirement workshops specialist LaterLife Learning, suggests that compliance with the spirit of the new rules varies significantly across UK employers: less than a third (29 percent) of older workers have been formally told about their right to continue working past the (now abolished) DRA, with more than half (51 percent) only becoming aware of this as a result of media coverage. 

Another striking finding is that even when employment does continue past age 65, employees may find that they have fewer company-sponsored benefits than before. The survey found that more than one in five employers (21 percent) restricted some staff benefits once age 65 had been passed. The 2014 Jelf Employee Benefits Survey sought views from employers, employees considering retirement, and recent retirees on age-related retirement & pensions issues, and also highlighted that: 1 in 5 employers do not explicitly inform employees who have passed age 65 that their benefit provision may be changing. 43 percent of employers are not aware of their insurers’ maximum age limits for Group Risk employee benefits.

Whilst there may be no explicit employer requirement to communicate to employees their right to continue working, or to continue to offer all benefits to older workers, it should perhaps be expected that most organisations would have informed their entire workforce of this change in advance, and probably shortly after, the abolition of the Default Retirement Age. If such announcements were made by employers, it appears that they have not been made well. The majority of employees – and in particular those older employees who are more immediately impacted by this change – have failed to understand the implications.

It also raises questions as to whether employers have fully embraced the new legislative landscape, for instance by updating terms and conditions and contracts of employment. Steve Herbert, head of benefits strategy at Jelf Employee Benefits said: “It is extremely concerning that three years on since the DRA was abolished, there is clearly some significant disparity in how this change is being managed by employers and communicated to employees. In a worst case scenario this could leave older employees vulnerable and under-insured, and/or employers effectively self-insuring the risk. The report findings suggest that many employers will need to urgently review their strategy and thinking around retirement issues.”

Commenting for LaterLife Learning, managing director Tony Clack said:“Despite these figures, in the last 12 months we have seen more and more employers recognising the importance, post DRA, of helping employees to plan their retirement and as a result to decide when to retire. Our Planning Retirement workshops, run both in-house and at 45 locations around the UK, have seen an almost fifty per cent increase over the last year, as a result.”

www.jelfgroup.com

Read more

Latest News

Read More

Wellbeing pays: the ROI HR can’t ignore

9 October 2025

Skills

7 October 2025

How to build a skills-based strategy

A key challenge for organisations looking at their skills strategy is getting their job data under control. Discover how creating a single source of truth...

Artificial Intelligence, Globalisation

7 October 2025

Talent strategies for business expansion and growth

Global Expansion 2025: Powerful Talent Management Strategies for a Diverse and AI-Driven Workforce....

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine – Human ResourcesSalary: £39,432 to £45,097 per annum (pro-rata) inclusive

Harper Adams University – Human ResourcesSalary: £46,049 to £50,253 per annum. Grade 10

University of Cambridge – Department of Clinical NeurosciencesSalary: £27,319 to £31,236

Royal Conservatoire of ScotlandSalary: £52,074 to £58,611

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE