'Draconian penalties' promised for schemes with poor dashboard data

Hope William-Smith
clock • 1 min read

Pensions and financial inclusion minister Guy Opperman has warned schemes who do not have their data organised to the standard required for the pensions dashboard will face “draconian penalties.”

Opperman said he was "utterly committed" to ensuring the dashboard went ahead in a presentation at the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) investment conference in Edinburgh today (12 March), but stressed schemes had to play their part better.

"The dashboard is the right thing to do and we continue working with delivery group," he said.

 "There is clearly a requirement for data to be standardised, but schemes should be under no illusion - [they] should not be waiting for legislation to get their data ready and there will be draconian penalties for those who don't have it."

Opperman added there was now "no legitimate reason" for schemes to be underprepared.

He added: "Schemes need to invest to improving data now and have a long hard look at themselves if they are yet to do that."

This comes a day after Money and Pensions Service chairman Sir Hector Sants told the Work and Pensions Committee (WPC) on Wednesday (11 March) that it was still "not possible" to answer when the dashboard would be ready.

Opperman said the steadily growing self-employed market gave further weight to the need for auto-enrolment (AE) provisions and their accessibility on a dashboard.

He added it was "astonishing" the self-employed were not being more engaged with.

He said: "The self-employed market is becoming more and more competitive and its astonishing there's not more engagement of them into schemes and funds when the government is trying to enable schemes and give opportunities to the self-employed to have pensions, like all the work on AE."

"We are going to great efforts to try to improve things for the self-employed."

More on Retirement

The advice dividend in an age of retirement uncertainty

The advice dividend in an age of retirement uncertainty

The UK pensions landscape has become progressively more complicated in recent decades

Andrew Tully
clock 17 February 2026 • 4 min read
Royal London introduces CRP framework to help advisers

Royal London introduces CRP framework to help advisers

Support when developing retirement income strategies for clients

Jenna Brown
clock 29 January 2026 • 1 min read
Just Group sees fall in retirement income sales as takeover approaches

Just Group sees fall in retirement income sales as takeover approaches

Brookfield Wealth Solutions to takeover during first half of the year

Isabel Baxter
clock 20 January 2026 • 2 min read

In-depth

What does the Schroders/Nuveen deal mean for Benchmark advisers?

What does the Schroders/Nuveen deal mean for Benchmark advisers?

ARs await deal impact amid future sale suggestions

Isabel Baxter
clock 26 February 2026 • 5 min read
The adviser firms private equity wants in 2026

The adviser firms private equity wants in 2026

'People-led durability is now the premium asset in 2026'

Laura Miller
clock 16 February 2026 • 7 min read
Onshore bonds are back – but who is leading the call for their return?

Onshore bonds are back – but who is leading the call for their return?

'Innovation, as ever in financial services, starts by looking in the rear-view mirror'

clock 11 February 2026 • 5 min read