
The introduction of auto-enrolment, a system that will automatically enrol many employees into a pension scheme, marks a pivotal step in strengthening retirement savings across the country. For workers, employers and the wider system, the implications are profound.
Here’s a comprehensive look at what auto-enrolment means for Ireland, how it works, who benefits most, how employers should view it, and—importantly—what lessons we can draw from other countries in Europe.
Under the new system, referred to as My Future Fund, most employees who currently do not participate in a workplace pension or payroll-deducted pension will be automatically enrolled.
Key eligibility criteria:
How contributions stack up:
Admin & oversight:
A new independent body, the National Automatic Enrolment Retirement Savings Authority (NAERSA), will manage the scheme — enrolling workers, collecting contributions, investing funds, and ensuring portability (so your pot “follows” you across jobs).
Opt-out & inclusion:
Employees have an opt-out option after a minimum period, but will remain in the system by default if they don’t act.
Ireland faces a significant retirement-savings challenge. Around one in three private-sector workers currently lack any supplementary pension beyond the State pension.
Given the State pension alone is unlikely to sustain many people’s lifestyle expectations in retirement, auto-enrolment aims to plug that gap by making saving automatic and collective.
By moving away from relying solely on individuals to opt-in (and many don’t), the system aims to raise coverage, contributions and ultimately, retirement outcomes. As one commentary put it: “Ireland is the last OECD country to introduce such a system.” WTW
The positives:
The challenges:
What employers should do now:
Auto-enrolment isn’t a novel idea internationally; countries like the UK, Lithuania, Denmark and Poland have already implemented versions of it.
UK: Introduced auto‐enrolment in 2012. Pension participation rose from ~40% to ~86%.
Key takeaway: Automatic sign-up works in boosting coverage.
Warning flags: Contribution rates for many workers remain low; many still save too little to achieve a comfortable retirement.
Lithuania, Poland, Denmark: Various mandatory or quasi-mandatory schemes with combinations of employee, employer and State contributions.
What Ireland should watch:
The arrival of auto-enrolment in Ireland is more than a policy tweak—it may represent a generational change in how retirement is funded. For many workers who previously had no pension through work, the default enrolment, combined with employer and state contributions, offers a new baseline of savings.
Over decades, this could raise coverage dramatically, reduce future reliance on the State pension, and improve retirement outcomes.
However, the success of the scheme will hinge on three things:
If you’re a worker in Ireland aged 23-60 earning over €20,000 and you don’t yet have a pension via your employer, then from 1 January 2026, you’ll likely find yourself automatically enrolled in My Future Fund unless you already have a qualifying scheme.
For employers, this is the time to prepare—review existing pension arrangements, align systems, communicate with staff, and factor in evolving contributions.
Auto‐enrolment isn’t a panacea. It won’t instantly create millionaire retirement pots. But it does change the baseline: saving becomes automatic, employer and state contributions build alongside, and the inertia that often prevents pension saving is broken.
For Ireland, this could be the moment pensions are taken seriously for a broad swathe of the workforce who previously had little or nothing in place. The question now isn’t if the scheme will launch, but how well both employers and employees come on board—and how effectively contributions are maintained, invested, and communicated.
If all goes well, 2026 will mark the dawn of a new era in Irish retirement provision.
Read more:
Ireland’s Game-Changer: Auto-Enrolment Pensions Arrive in 2026