Two types of State Pension
There are two State Pensions in Ireland. Most workers will receive the Contributory pension.
| Type | Based on | Means-tested? |
|---|---|---|
| State Pension (Contributory) | Your PRSI record | No |
| State Pension (Non-Contributory) | Your financial means | Yes |
Source: Citizens Information — State Pension (Contributory) ↗
This article focuses on the Contributory pension, which is what most employees and self-employed people will receive. If you do not qualify for the Contributory pension, the Non-Contributory pension may be available depending on your income and assets.
How much is the State Pension in 2026?
The maximum personal rate of the State Pension (Contributory) in 2026 is €299.30 per week. This is approximately €15,564 per year.
| Age | Maximum weekly rate (2026) |
|---|---|
| Under 80 | €299.30 |
| 80 and over | €309.30 |
Source: Citizens Information — State Pension rates 2026 ↗
How to qualify
To receive any State Pension (Contributory), you must meet three conditions:
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Age | You must be 66 or over |
| Minimum contributions | At least 520 paid PRSI contributions (10 years) |
| PRSI class | Contributions must be full-rate (Class A, E, F, G, H, N or S) |
Source: Citizens Information — Qualifying for State Pension ↗
To receive the maximum rate, you generally need 2,080 or more PRSI contributions — roughly 40 years of full-rate contributions. People with between 520 and 2,079 contributions receive a reduced rate based on their record.
Pension age and deferral
The State Pension age in Ireland is currently 66. You do not have to stop working to claim it.
Since January 2024, if you were born on or after 1 January 1958, you can choose to defer your pension and start claiming it at any age between 66 and 70. Deferring increases the weekly amount you eventually receive.
Is the State Pension taxed?
Yes. The State Pension is treated as income and is subject to income tax. However, most people whose only income is the State Pension will not pay tax because their tax credits exceed the tax due.
If you have other income — such as a private or occupational pension — the combined income may push you into a taxable position. In that case, Revenue will usually collect the tax through a reduced tax credit on your other income source.