Managing pension savings comes with necessary compliance obligations. But when regulations change rapidly, it can be difficult to ensure your digital architecture can cope. We explore and disclose 7 ways mid-sized pension fund providers can stay compliant with accounting software for financial services.
The regulatory landscape is evolving
Compliance requirements are intensifying in the UK pensions sector as The Pensions Regulator (TPR) moves from administrative to proactive governance of public money. Although this is crucial to protecting savers’ money, it does increase the pressure on pension providers.
Unlike many small business owners, including sole traders, who rely on standard bookkeeping software to manage day-to-day finances, mid-sized pension schemes operate in a more complex environment.
Recent regulatory changes from TPR outline the effective administration of pension schemes. While not necessarily introducing any new legal obligations, this guidance highlights the risks associated with data handling, legacy systems, and complex processing. These risks are becoming more pronounced as regulations shift towards continuous monitoring, real-time data access, and reporting transparency, alongside other initiatives such as Making Tax Digital.
We discuss the two key, data-driven developments mid-sized schemes should be aware of, notably the introduction of pension dashboards and the Defined Benefit (DB) funding rules. Visit our market page or get in touch with our dedicated team to learn how Xledger supports pension funds, local government schemes, and other FinServ organisations.
Pension dashboards
TPR states that, from 31st October 2026, scheme users should be able to view all their pension financial data (workplace, personal, and state) in one place. To comply with these guidelines, pension scheme providers with more than 100 members must connect to central government digital dashboards and respond to data requests.
Pension scheme providers will need to future-proof their digital architecture to ensure data readiness and secure user access. Operationally, this update affects pension scheme providers that rely on legacy finance and administrative systems, because this software tends to prevent real-time insights and robust integrations.
As the expectation for real-time pension data increases, providers will need to leverage cloud accounting and financial services accounting software capable of handling live data feeds and robust integrations with other business systems.



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Defined Benefit funding rules
The new Defined Benefit funding rules introduce a long-term strategic approach to how pension schemes manage funds and risk. A key requirement is for pension schemes to define how they will reach a low-dependency (low-risk) funding strategy as they mature.
One of the most significant updates in these changes, due to come into effect from 2027, is how mid-sized scheme providers can manage surplus funds.
In simple terms, the changes allow:
- Easier access to surplus funds
- Lower thresholds for releasing surplus funds
- New ways to distribute surplus funds
- More flexibility for trustees, while still managing surplus responsibly
Mid-sized pension funds face an interesting shift in scheme management as a result of these changes, as they are often large enough to have a meaningful surplus, but too small to have already implemented advanced digital architecture. These new surplus management opportunities mean that pension scheme providers must take an active role in tracking, reporting, modelling, and managing the surplus to stay compliant.
Compliance strategies for financial services organisations
The evolving requirements identify the importance of robust accounting software for financial services organisations, capable of handling real-time data queries and compliant reporting.
While functionality is critical, systems should provide a user-friendly interface and an expert support team, ideally with UK-based support to align with local regulatory requirements.
In light of the changes, Pension fund providers may need to review their compliance strategies. Here are seven ways that pension scheme providers can strengthen compliance:
- Conduct full data audits
- Assess real-time insights capabilities
- Review the actuarial and funding strategy
- Review technology and system limitations
- Enhance regulatory reporting and audit trails
- Improve system integrations
- Develop a dashboard readiness plan
For many mid-sized pension scheme providers, these changes highlight the need to move from fragmented legacy systems towards integrated, automated, and insightful cloud-based financial software.
As UK pension regulation becomes more data-driven, compliance is no longer a periodic exercise — it’s a continuous necessity. To navigate and thrive in the changing regulatory environment, mid-sized pension providers must ensure their business systems can deliver real-time, accurate, and auditable financial data.
Book your free demo with our expert consultants to learn how Xledger can help your financial services organisation stay compliant with changing regulations.
Frequently Asked Questions
The new regulations around dashboards will shift operations for pension providers by demanding instant data delivery from the pension scheme to the querying user. This means pensions teams must be ready to respond to data requests quickly and maintain consistent, accurate records at all times.
Actuaries are becoming central to compliance by frequently monitoring funding positions and supporting long-term funding strategies. Because they rely heavily on accurate, real-time data, actuaries need access to business systems with live insights.
Legacy or on-premise finance systems limit pension compliance for several reasons, including poor integrations that force users to create complex manual processes and a lack of real-time reporting that prevents confident decision-making. These lead to slower response times, increased compliance burden, and increased human error.
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