Update, 19 May 2026: The Pensions Ombudsman published its Corporate Plan 2026/27 in the week of 12 May 2026. Headline points relevant to public sector scheme members: staffing will increase by 20%, including two new specialist teams focused on complex cases; the plan is backed by a new three-year DWP funding settlement; case throughput rose 14% in 2025/26 and 63% above the 2023/24 baseline; and TPO has flagged earlier engagement on systemic issues affecting large numbers of scheme members as a strategic priority. The systemic-issues priority is directly relevant to the kinds of public sector situations members already use the Ombudsman for, including Civil Service Pension Scheme administrative delays and McCloud remedy complaints.
Educational, not advice. This article explains how the Pensions Ombudsman (TPO) handles complaints about UK pension schemes, with a focus on the routes available to members of public service pension schemes. It does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Pension Plain is not authorised or regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.
Scope: This piece covers what the Pensions Ombudsman is, the kinds of complaints it can investigate, the internal dispute resolution (IDR) process you must use first, how to make a complaint, what happens during an investigation, the time and financial-limit framework, and the recent change under the Pension Schemes Act 2026 making TPO decisions directly enforceable without a County Court order. It is written from the perspective of public service scheme members (LGPS, NHS, Teachers, Civil Service, AFPS, Police, Firefighters), but the TPO process is the same in shape for private sector members.
In short
- The Pensions Ombudsman (TPO) is an independent, statutory body that investigates complaints and disputes about UK pension schemes. The service is free to members.
- Before you can complain to TPO you almost always need to use your scheme’s Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) procedure first, with a written stage one decision from the scheme administrator and a stage two appeal to the scheme manager.
- TPO can investigate maladministration (errors, delays, misinformation) and disputes about facts or scheme rules. It cannot make new policy or change the law.
- The time limit to bring a complaint is generally three years from when the event you are complaining about happened, or when you should reasonably have known about it.
- From the Pension Schemes Act 2026, TPO determinations are directly enforceable. Before this change, you needed a County Court order to enforce a TPO determination if the scheme did not comply voluntarily; the new statute removes that extra step.
- The whole process, from the start of IDR to a TPO determination, can take well over a year. It is slow but free, and most members do not need a lawyer.
What the Pensions Ombudsman is and is not
The Pensions Ombudsman is an independent statutory body set up to resolve pension disputes. It was established by the Pension Schemes Act 1993 and is funded by a levy on pension schemes, so it is free for members to use. The current head of the service is the Pensions Ombudsman; their team of caseworkers and adjudicators do the day-to-day investigation work.
TPO can investigate two broad categories of complaint:
- Maladministration. Things like delays, mistakes in calculation, lost paperwork, incorrect information given to you about your benefits, or a failure to follow the scheme’s own rules or procedures.
- Disputes of fact or law. For example, whether you were a member of the scheme during a particular period, whether a discretionary benefit decision was made correctly, or how a scheme rule should be applied to your circumstances.
It cannot:
- Change the law or the scheme rules themselves. If the rules say what they say, even if you think the outcome is unfair, that is not a maladministration complaint.
- Take complaints about State Pension entitlement (those go to the Department for Work and Pensions, with eventual review by HM Courts and Tribunals Service if needed).
- Take complaints about advice from a regulated financial adviser (those go to the Financial Ombudsman Service).
- Take complaints about an employer’s decision not to provide a pension scheme at all.
- Award unlimited compensation; TPO works within statutory financial limits and is mainly focused on restitution and putting members back in the position they should have been in.
Step 1: Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR)
TPO is the final stage. Before it will accept your complaint, you must (with very limited exceptions) have first exhausted your scheme’s IDR procedure. IDR is a statutory two-stage process every UK occupational pension scheme has to operate. The shape of it across public service schemes:
Stage 1: the scheme administrator’s decision
You write to the scheme (almost always to a designated “IDR contact”), set out your complaint clearly, and the scheme administrator investigates. They must give you a written decision, normally within two months of receiving a complete complaint. The decision must explain the conclusion, refer to the relevant scheme rules, and tell you about your right to a stage two appeal.
Stage 2: the scheme manager’s appeal
If you are not satisfied with the stage one decision, you can ask the scheme manager (the body legally responsible for running the scheme, for example a Local Government Pension Scheme administering authority, or the Department for Education for the Teachers’ Pension Scheme) to review the decision. They must give a stage two decision, again normally within two months. The stage two decision is supposed to be a fresh look at the complaint, not just a rubber-stamp.
What “almost always” means
TPO can occasionally accept a complaint where IDR has not been completed, for example if the scheme has not responded within a reasonable time, or if continuing with IDR would clearly be pointless. But you should expect to do the IDR steps first, and you should keep the dated correspondence as evidence. Skipping the procedure usually delays things rather than speeding them up.
Step 2: making the complaint to TPO
If the stage two decision has not resolved the issue, or the scheme has failed to issue one within a reasonable time, you can refer the complaint to the Pensions Ombudsman. The complaint goes in via the TPO website or by post; the process is designed to be accessible to ordinary members without a representative. You will be asked to set out:
- What happened, in chronological order.
- What the scheme has done in response (the stage one and stage two outcomes, attached as PDFs or scans).
- What you want as the outcome (a recalculated benefit, restoration of a payment, compensation for distress, an apology, or a corrected record).
Keep your writing factual and chronological. Attach the documents that support each point. TPO caseworkers will request anything else they need.
What happens during a TPO investigation
The TPO process is broadly:
- Triage. A caseworker checks the complaint is in scope (TPO has jurisdiction, IDR is complete, time limits are met). If it is not in scope you are told why and signposted to the correct body.
- Initial assessment. An adjudicator reviews the complaint and the scheme’s response and, in many cases, issues an Opinion. The Opinion is the adjudicator’s view of the complaint and what should happen.
- Response to the Opinion. Both you and the scheme can accept the Opinion as the resolution. Many complaints settle here.
- Determination. If either side disagrees with the Opinion and wants to proceed, the case goes to the Pensions Ombudsman (or a Deputy) for a final binding decision. That is a written Determination, published (often anonymised) on the TPO website.
Determinations are legally binding on the scheme and on you. There is no further appeal as of right; appeals to the High Court on a point of law are possible in very limited circumstances.
The Pension Schemes Act 2026 change: direct enforceability
Before the Pension Schemes Act 2026, if a scheme did not voluntarily implement a TPO determination, you had to apply to the County Court for an order to enforce it. The procedure was workable but added time and complexity, and it was particularly awkward in cases where the scheme was reluctant rather than legally entitled to resist.
The Pension Schemes Act 2026 makes TPO determinations directly enforceable. The TPO Corporate Plan 2026/27 (published in May 2026) confirms this and signals it is part of a broader programme to make the service quicker and more accessible to members. The new direct-enforcement route should:
- Reduce the lag between a final Determination and the scheme acting on it.
- Lower the practical pressure on members to engage with the court system.
- Give the Ombudsman more credible enforcement teeth, which tends to make schemes more willing to comply earlier in the process.
For most members, the day-to-day experience of the complaint process does not change. The change matters at the back end of cases that drag on.
Alongside the direct-enforceability change, the TPO Corporate Plan 2026/27 confirms a few other things worth noting for members who are weighing whether to bring a complaint. The Department for Work and Pensions has provided TPO with a new three-year funding settlement, which removes the year-to-year resourcing uncertainty that has at times slowed case handling. TPO is planning a roughly 20% increase in headcount to clear its backlog and process new complaints faster. And under the Pension Schemes Act 2026, TPO has formally been given the status of a “competent court” for the enforcement of its determinations, the technical wording that underpins the direct-enforcement change above. The combined effect is a service that is slightly better resourced, with more direct legal force, and with a stated ambition to engage earlier with systemic issues affecting large numbers of members rather than handling each complaint purely on its individual facts.
Time limits and other practical realities
Three-year time limit
The general rule is that you have three years from the event you are complaining about (or from the date you reasonably became aware of it) to bring the complaint. There are some exceptions and the Ombudsman can extend time in limited circumstances. The practical advice: do not sit on a complaint. Time limits matter, and a missed deadline can end an otherwise solid case.
How long the process takes
From the start of IDR stage one to a final Determination, members should plan for a process of well over a year, often two. The IDR stages add four months minimum. TPO’s caseload has been heavy and case-closure rates have been improving but the queue is real. The TPO Corporate Plan reports a 14% improvement in case closures in the first half of 2025/26 versus the prior year, so the trend is positive.
Costs
TPO is free for members. There is no application fee. You do not need a lawyer; many successful complaints are run by the member alone. If you do choose to use a paid representative, you bear those costs yourself. TPO does not award costs except in exceptional circumstances.
Compensation
TPO’s main remedy is restitution: putting you in the position you should have been in if the maladministration or dispute had not occurred. That can mean recalculating a pension, paying arrears, correcting records, or sometimes paying a sum for non-financial loss (distress and inconvenience). Awards for distress and inconvenience are typically modest, often in the low hundreds of pounds and only into four figures for clearly serious cases. TPO is not a route to large damages awards.
What kinds of complaints are common in public service schemes
Examples of complaints that frequently reach TPO from public service scheme members:
- Errors in calculating a pension at retirement, particularly where pre-2015 and post-2015 scheme service interacts.
- Delays in issuing benefit quotes, statements, or McCloud Remediable Service Statements.
- Disputes about ill-health retirement decisions, including the medical evidence and the scheme’s discretionary judgement.
- Survivor benefit disputes, including who is treated as a “qualifying partner” and the application of nominations.
- Cases where contributions were not deducted correctly by the employer, leading to gaps in service.
- Disputes about pension sharing on divorce and the implementation of pension sharing orders.
- Lost or incomplete service records, especially after employer changes, contractor transitions, or local government reorganisations.
