State pensioners could get triple lock ‘double boost’ as inflation rises


Retirees could see a ‘double boost’ to their state pensions if rising energy prices push inflation higher following the conflict in the Middle East.

Britain’s fiscal watchdog has warned that inflation could climb above three per cent by the end of the year if oil and gas prices remain elevated due to the Iran conflict.


Higher inflation therefore increases the likelihood that pension payments will rise more sharply in future upratings, potentially giving retirees a larger increase than previously expected.

Under the triple lock guarantee, state pension payments must increase annually by whichever figure is highest among inflation, wage growth, or 2.5 per cent.

This mechanism creates a distinctive effect: when prices surge, wages typically follow suit the subsequent year, effectively allowing pensioners to benefit from the same inflationary shock twice over.

The Ukraine precedent demonstrates precisely how this works in practice. Following Russia’s 2022 invasion, which sent energy costs soaring, state pensioners secured a record 10.1 per cent uplift in 2023 based on inflation figures.

The following year brought an 8.4 per cent increase driven by wage growth, even though inflation had by then dropped to 6.7 per cent.

This pattern of back-to-back substantial rises illustrates how a single price shock can translate into two years of generous pension increases.

Annual adjustments are calculated using September’s inflation reading alongside wage growth data from the May to July period, creating the lag that enables this double-counting effect.

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Annual adjustments are calculated using September’s inflation reading

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Ezra Cohen, of the Centre for British Progress think tank, acknowledged the triple lock had done a “great job” of reducing pensioner poverty but identified what he called a “fundamental flaw” in its design.

“[The triple lock] is guaranteed to ‘double count’ price increases, because a spike in inflation in one year typically leads to an increase in wages the next,” he said.

“As a result, even a brief rise in prices will boost pensions twice over, making the triple lock volatile and increasingly unsustainable. The Iran war could well see this play out again.”

Adam Cole, of wealth management firm Quilter, warned that while pensioners would welcome another double boost, it would “amplify the long-term pressure” on public finances.

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A think tank acknowledged the triple lock had done a “great job” of reducing pensioner poverty

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“The triple lock was designed to repair decades of relative decline in the state pension, but it now operates as a ratchet that locks in temporary shocks,” he added.

The Chancellor Rachel Reeves has urged households to prepare for renewed inflationary pressures stemming from the Iranian conflict, which has effectively shut down the Strait of Hormuz, among the world’s most critical oil shipping routes.

Crude prices reached $100 per barrel this week as Iranian strikes targeted energy infrastructure across the region.

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Current headline inflation stands at theree per cent, having retreated from last year’s 3.8 per cent peak

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Current headline inflation stands at theree per cent, having retreated from last year’s 3.8 per cent peak, though forecasters had anticipated it falling towards two per cent before hostilities commenced.

Millions of pensioners will receive a 4.8 per cent increase this April, taking the full state pension to £12,547.60 annually.

Official projections show the state pension bill climbing from £136.6 billion in 2024-25 to £171.7 billion by 2029-30.

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