A SIPP opened at birth could be worth £10 million in 55 years’ time

Featured in:
abcd

Image source: Getty Images

Parents can pay as little as £2,880 a year into a child’s SIPP (Self-Invested Personal Pension) – with the Government increasing this to £3,600. Given enough time, the results are remarkable.

sadasda

The mechanics are uncomplicated but powerful. Parents and grandparents can contribute up to £2,880 a year to their child’s SIPP – and even though the child pays no tax, the government adds a 20% allowance, bringing the total annual contribution to £3,600. That’s all. Here’s the whole strategy.

Let’s assume that the parents, and then the child, maintain this contribution for another 55 years. It must be admitted that at the end of this period – in about 50 years – the premiums will actually be quite compact in relation to the value of money.

Created with Claude

Time does the challenging work

Assuming the money is invested in global stocks that return 11% per year – essentially in line with the norm S&P500the company’s performance over the last 55 years – this modest contribution adds up to something extraordinary. After 20 years, the pot is around £230,000. After 35 years, £1.2 million. By the age of 55, just over £10 million.

Created with Claude

What’s really striking is how much of this growth happens at the end. The last decade alone has added over £6 million – more than the previous 45 years combined. Here’s what mixing actually means in practice: the longer it lasts, the faster it accelerates. The total amount paid out over 55 years is just £198,000. The rest – over £9.9 million – is pure growth.

There are, of course, caveats. According to the regulations that will come into force in 2028, the money will be kept until at least the age of 57. A return of 11% is not guaranteed – markets can disappoint for years.

Many families simply cannot budget £2,880 a year from birth. But it’s worth playing with the numbers. Even compact donations – say £20 a month – can make a huge difference over time.

Where to invest?

For long-term SIPP investors, few investment funds make a stronger case than A Scottish mortgage investment fund (LSE:SMT).

An investment fund run by Baillie Gifford does something most retail investors can’t: gain access to unique private companies before they go public.

This is clearly noticeable in its larger holding company – SpaceX. The company is valued at £800 billion on Scottish Mortgage’s balance sheet, but that could double if SpaceX goes public this year – it already accounts for around 16% of the portfolio.

The company also provides investors with instant diversification with many household names and companies you’ve never heard of.

The philosophy is patience – positions are held for years, sometimes decades, ignoring short-term noise. This comes with real risks: confidence has fallen by more than 50% in 2022 amid a edged revaluation of growth stocks. Moreover, concentrated private holdings can be illiquid and tough to value accurately.

However, it is certainly an intriguing proposition and worth considering.

abcd
sadasda

Find us on

Latest articles

Related articles

See more articles

Inflation in China will fall to 1.0% in March,...

April 10, 2026 at 12:16 ESTiShares China Large-Cap ETF (FXI), USD, EWH, GXC, CAF, PGJ, TDF, KBA,...

1 FTSE 250 share I like and 1 I...

Image source: Getty Images The FTSE250...

Morgan Stanley warns Fed that there is a risk...

April 9, 2026 at 11:22 ESTState Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY), VOO, IVV, RSP, QQQ,...

Is NIO stock the next Tesla?

Image source: Getty Images Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA)...