No Result
View All Result
Benefits Expert
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Alerts
  • Events
  • Contact
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • PROFILE
  • PENSIONS
  • GLOBAL REWARDS
  • FINANCIAL BENEFITS
  • HEALTH & WELLBEING
  • DIVERSITY & INCLUSION
  • PODCAST
No Result
View All Result
Benefits Expert
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • PROFILE
  • PENSIONS
  • GLOBAL REWARDS
  • FINANCIAL BENEFITS
  • HEALTH & WELLBEING
  • DIVERSITY & INCLUSION
  • PODCAST

Workplace savings need to address LGBTQ+ ‘pensions gap’

by Emma Simon
04/11/2025
LGBTQ+ Pride March, diversity, inclusion
Share on LinkedInShare on Twitter

LGBTQ+ savers face a “pensions gap” according to a new industry paper from the Society of Pension Professionals (SPP).

This latest  diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) paper highlights  the challenges faced by LGBTQ+ people  ad suggests steps to address this issue, both within the pensions industry and wider workplace, to help support better retirement outcomes.

In the report, Stonewall chief executive Simon Blake calls for  pension providers to improve inclusion, and says this aligns with recent guidance from The Pensions Regulator. He stresses that providers must ensure all paperwork, communications, and scheme information reflect the diverse identities and family structures of LGBTQ+ members.

Blake also highlights the importance of greater “curiosity” and understanding of LGBTQ+ histories and lived experiences to support more open and empathetic decision-making.

He says: “For example, some of us may have done our financial planning independently, even when married, because we internalised the idea that our relationships might not last. Others may not have planned together because we didn’t have children, or didn’t think about pensions until later in life because we didn’t expect to grow old.”

He adds that society still pays too little attention to the experiences of older LGBTQ+ people:

“There are few stories about older people in public discourse, and even fewer about older LGBTQ+ individuals and their experiences of ageing.”

Blake concludes that while progress has been made, financial inequality remains entrenched, leading to a continuing LGBTQ+ pensions gap: “It is against this backdrop that we are planning our futures.”

The paper also includes commentary from Savannah Adeniyan, SPP member and solicitor at Travers Smith LLP, who discusses the workplace barriers still faced by many LGBTQ+ professionals.

RELATED POSTS

Handshake, recruit, new job, hire, appoint

HR software firm appoints chief revenue officer

Burnout, work, exhaustion, work life balance, always on, disconnect, switch off, wellbeing, health, productivity

2.2m people utilise insurer-funded health services

“I know many LGBTQ+ people who have encountered ‘glass ceilings’ in their workplaces,” she says. “While I can be completely myself in my current firm, the reality is that too many people still feel unable to be open about their identity for fear it might harm their careers.”

Glass ceilings which affect pay will ultimately be reflected in lower retirement incomes she says. Despite these challenges, Adeniyan remains optimistic, noting growing inclusivity across sectors such as the legal profession:

“The trend is moving in the right direction—and that’s something to be positive about.”

The full SPP paper is available to download here

Next Post
Handshake, recruit, new job, hire, appoint

HR software firm appoints chief revenue officer

SUMMIT

BENEFITS UNBOXED PODCAST

Benefits Unboxed
Benefits Unboxed

The podcast from Benefits Expert, the title for HR, reward and benefits professionals.

Seasoned professionals examine the challenges and innovations in today’s employee benefits, reward and HR sector. Every episode, they will unbox a key issue and unpack what it really means for employers and how they can tackle it.

The regulars are Claire Churchard, editor of Benefits Expert; Carole Goldsmith, HR director at the Royal Horticultural Society, and Steve Herbert, consultant and rewards & benefits veteran.

Benefits Unboxed – Hybrid work: reality versus rhetoric
byBenefits Expert from Definite Article Media

Return-to-office mandates are a topic that’s generating plenty of heat in the media, but how closely do the headlines match workplace reality? 

In this episode, one of a three-part series of 10-minute podcasts, hosts Claire Churchard and Steve Herbert discuss data that shows remote or home working is on the rise.

We look at what this means for HR, from balancing employee flexibility with business needs, to ensuring benefits packages remain fair and accessible. We discuss the pinch points, and the opportunities, in building the new normal of work.

Benefits Unboxed – Hybrid work: reality versus rhetoric
Benefits Unboxed – Hybrid work: reality versus rhetoric
31/08/2025
Benefits Expert from Definite Article Media
Search Results placeholder

GUIDE TO CASH PLANS



REQUEST A FREE COPY

OPINION

Alex Elliott, Birketts, employment law

Alex Elliott: New limits on NDAs, what’s ahead for employers?

Luke McClaran, chief people officer, Vitality

Luke McClaran: prevention pays, why employer health checks matter

Duncan Brown, principal associate, Institute for Employment Studies, pay. reward, work

From ‘boat people’ to boardrooms: HR can help reshape migration mindsets

Neil Mullarkey, communications, expert, author, improv

Why marketing will define tomorrow’s reward leaders

SUBSCRIBE

Benefits Expert

© 2024 Definite Article Limited. Design by 71 Media Limited.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

Follow Benefits Expert

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • In depth
  • Profile
  • Pensions
  • Global rewards
  • Financial benefits
  • Health & wellbeing
  • Diversity & Inclusion