Pension Mis-Selling — Leeds

Pension Mis-Selling Claims — Leeds

Leeds is a major financial services centre and a significant source of pension mis-selling complaints. DB transfer and SIPP mis-selling affected thousands of workers across the Leeds city region.

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The Local and Regional Picture

As one of the UK’s largest financial centres outside London, Leeds has a significant concentration of both financial adviser firms and defined benefit pension scheme members. During the 2015–2022 period, numerous adviser firms and IFA networks operating from or around Leeds gave DB pension transfer advice that the FOS subsequently found to be unsuitable.

Major employers in Leeds and the surrounding West Yorkshire region — including local government, NHS trusts, large manufacturing firms, and financial services employers — operated defined benefit pension schemes whose members were targeted by transfer advisers during the peak mis-selling period.

Leeds & West Yorkshire Pension Claims

If you received pension transfer advice from a firm operating in Leeds or West Yorkshire, a formal assessment will clarify which claim routes are available. The FOS has jurisdiction over all FCA-authorised firm complaints regardless of where the firm or client is based.

Which Routes Apply

Route 1

Direct Firm Complaint

Where the firm that advised you is still trading, a formal DISP complaint is the mandatory first step. The firm must respond within 8 weeks.

£10,000 SRA cap
Route 2

Financial Ombudsman

If the firm rejects your complaint or fails to respond, escalation to the FOS is free. The FOS has upheld 55–77% of DB transfer complaints nationally.

£455,000 cap
Route 3

FSCS Compensation

Where the adviser firm or SIPP operator has failed and been declared in default, the FSCS pays compensation directly.

£85,000 per firm
Route 4

Civil Litigation

Where losses exceed the FSCS cap or FSMA s.27 applies, civil court proceedings may recover the full uncapped amount.

Uncapped
⚠ Time Limit Warning

The FOS applies a six-year absolute clock from the date of advice and a three-year awareness clock from when you first knew or ought to have known about your loss. Both clocks run simultaneously. For DB pension transfer advice given between 2015 and 2019, the six-year clock is now at or near expiry. Act immediately to preserve your claim rights. See redressadvisory.com/time-limits.

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Redress Advisory Ltd is a technology platform. Regulated claims work carried out by SRA-authorised Operating Partner solicitor firms. You may complain directly to the FOS (0800 023 4567) or FSCS (0800 678 1100) free of charge. Time limits apply. Legal references: Berkeley Burke v FOS [2018] EWHC 2878 · Adams v Options UK [2021] EWCA Civ 1188 · Fletcher v Options UK [2024] EWCA Civ 541.