TodoAlicante posts pension calculator
- TodoAlicante published an English-language retirement calculator on April 27 that estimates Spain’s public pension, retirement age and payment year for salaried and self-employed workers. - The tool asks for birth date, years contributed and salary or contribution base, then models inflation and wage growth with 2% CPI and 3% salary defaults. - It tracks Spain’s 2026-2043 pension transition, but only for public benefits under current rules. (todoalicante.es)
TodoAlicante has posted an English-language retirement calculator that estimates when a worker in Spain can retire and what public pension they could receive. (todoalicante.es) The simulator covers two categories: salaried workers and self-employed workers. It asks for a birth date, years of contributions, and either annual gross salary or a monthly contribution base. (todoalicante.es) After the first estimate, users can change assumptions for inflation and pay growth. The default settings assume annual Consumer Price Index growth of 2% and annual salary growth of 3%. (todoalicante.es) The result is not just one pension figure. The calculator shows the retirement year and age, a monthly pension in euros of the retirement year, a current-value figure adjusted for inflation, and a table showing the calculation. (todoalicante.es) TodoAlicante says the tool only applies to ordinary retirement in Spain’s general regime and the special regime for self-employed workers. It does not present itself as a full retirement-income planner. (todoalicante.es) The calculator is built around Spain’s current retirement rules, which hinge on years contributed. TodoAlicante says workers with 38 years and 3 months by age 65 can retire at 65 until 2026, while others must wait until 66 years and 10 months before 2027 and 67 years thereafter. (todoalicante.es) It also reflects the pension reform now moving through a long transition. TodoAlicante says the earnings period used to calculate the regulatory base will expand from 25 years to 29 years by 2037, and for retirements from 2026 to 2043 the simulator applies whichever formula is more favorable under the law. (todoalicante.es) (fundacionmapfre.org) Spain’s own Social Security service already offers an official retirement calculator using data in its databases and lets users model future scenarios such as unemployment, changes in contribution base or moving into another scheme. (seg-social.gob.es) TodoAlicante’s version is lighter and public-facing, but it points at the same core question: how contribution history, retirement age and projected earnings shape a state pension in Spain. (todoalicante.es) (seg-social.gob.es)