Top fund picks for self-invested pensions

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Friday marks the end of pension awareness week. Since automatic enrolment become a legal requirement in 2017, millions of workers have joined pension schemes. But what else can they do to prepare for retirement?

There is a host of information available to make people aware of benefits of pension schemes and while tools like the pensions dashboard are still in the making there are options to explore, such as a self-invested personal pension (SIPP).

A SIPP, as the name suggests, is something you can do yourself provided you have the required expertise and knowledge of investing in stock markets. However, it is recommended that you use a regulated financial adviser to help choose and manage SIPP investments if not.

Helen Morrissey, Yahoo Finance UK's pensions columnist and head of retirement analysis at Hargreaves Lansdown, says the flexibility to manage your investments was a "huge benefit" of SIPPs.

"You will have access to a wider range of investments than with a standard pension provider," she adds. That includes shares, funds, investment trusts and even property.

Read more: How to make sure you'll get the full state pension

"This range of choice gives you the opportunity to invest in line with your values while building your financial resilience in retirement,” Morrissey says.

Anyone under the age of 75 in the UK can open a SIPP and you can also hold one in addition to a workplace pension. In fact, you can ask an employer if they would contribute to SIPP instead of a workplace pension.

As with other types of pension, SIPP investments can grow free from income and capital gains taxes. In addition, contributions are also eligible for tax relief, meaning the government effectively tops up money you pay into a SIPP or other pensions, by 20%.

Higher-rate tax payers can also claim back an additional 20% through a self-assessment tax return, going up to 25% for additional-rate taxpayers.

The maximum most people can contribute tax-free to their SIPP a year is £60,000.

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Emma Wall, head of investment analysis and research at Hargreaves Lansdown, says that both workplace pensions and SIPPs can be set to a "default option", where investments are based around a set level of risk depending on life stage.

For those still working and far away from retirement, also known as the "accumulation phase", she explains that the pension pot is typically invested more in "growth assets" like stocks. Meanwhile, the importance of capital preservation for those approaching retirement age means their pot tends to be invested in lower-risk assets, such as bonds.