Published: September 2025
Author: Amergin Consulting Ltd.
Target Audience: SME Owners, Finance Directors, HR Managers
Book a meeting: Schedule your free AE Readiness Check
Auto-Enrolment goes live on 1 January 2026. Every Irish employer with eligible staff must identify who to enrol, calculate pension contributions through payroll, and submit data via the NAERSA portal. The problem? 79% of Irish organisations are still unprepared or only partially ready (Zellis research).
For SMEs, this isn't just another HR task—it's a compliance obligation with real financial consequences. Get it wrong and you face payroll errors, employee disputes, and potential penalties. But the window to prepare is closing fast.
This quarter is your implementation year. Use Q4 2025 to audit eligibility, validate payroll systems, budget multi-year costs, and brief your team. Done properly, January 2026 becomes just another routine payroll cycle.
✓ Confirm who's affected: Identify staff aged 23–60 earning €20k+ without existing pensions
✓ Validate payroll: Ensure your system handles AE deductions, employer contributions, and NAERSA file formats
✓ Budget forward: Model costs through 2030 as contribution rates phase up from 1.5% to 6%
✓ Access the portal: Set up NAERSA/MyFutureFund access using your ROS credentials
✓ Communicate clearly: Prepare staff briefings explaining the new payslip deductions
Amergin viewpoint: AE is an operations project with a finance outcome. Treat 2025 as your implementation year so January 2026 is routine, not crisis.
After multiple delays, the Government has confirmed AE will commence on 1 January 2026, aligned with the tax year. Minister for Social Protection Dara Calleary signed the commencement order in late 2025, making this Ireland's biggest pension reform in decades.
Why this matters: No more delays. Your systems, processes, and staff communications must be ready by year-end.
The National Automatic Enrolment Retirement Savings Authority (NAERSA) is the statutory body overseeing the scheme. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) operates the technical infrastructure and digital platforms under a managed service contract.
Practical implications:
Independent research shows 79% of Irish organisations remain unprepared. Only 21% report full readiness, despite the January deadline.
Translation for SMEs: Payroll providers, consultants, and IT vendors will be swamped in Q4 2025. Get your project started now before the queue forms.
Mandatory enrolment applies to:
Voluntary opt-in available for:
Out of scope:
Auto-Enrolment uses a gradual phase-in over 10 years:
Period | Employee | Employer | State | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
2026–2028 | 1.5% | 1.5% | €1 per €6 | ~4% |
2029–2031 | 3% | 3% | €1 per €6 | ~7% |
2032–2034 | 4.5% | 4.5% | €1 per €6 | ~10% |
2035+ | 6% | 6% | €1 per €6 | ~13% |
Key points:
Budget implication: A €30k employee costs you €450/year in 2026, rising to €1,800/year by 2035.
Opt-out window: Employees can only opt out during a two-month window starting six months after enrolment (months 7–8).
Refund rules: If an employee opts out, they receive a refund of their own contributions. Employer and State contributions remain in the fund.
Re-enrolment cycle: Employees who opt out are automatically re-enrolled after two years if still eligible. This cycle repeats indefinitely.
Compliance risk: Employers cannot encourage, pressure, or incentivise employees to opt out. This is illegal and enforceable by the Workplace Relations Commission.
How it works:
Portal access: Available to employers and authorised payroll/tax agents using MyGovID authentication.
Use this as your internal project plan. Assign owners, set deadlines, and track completion.
What to do:
Why it matters: This determines the scale of your AE obligation and drives your budget calculations.
Common mistakes:
Deliverable: Spreadsheet showing AE status for every employee, ready for payroll setup.
What to validate:
Edge cases to test:
Vendor questions to ask:
Deliverable: Written confirmation from payroll provider that your system is AE-ready, plus documented test results.
What to calculate:
Build a multi-year cost projection showing employer contributions from 2026 through 2035.
Worked examples (employer cost only):
Budget tips:
Deliverable: Board-approved AE cost forecast integrated into 2026–2030 financial plans.
Setup steps:
Data governance checklist:
Deliverable: Portal access confirmed, internal SOP documented, roles assigned.
What to prepare:
Sample language:
"Starting 1 January 2026, Ireland's new Auto-Enrolment pension scheme launches. This means eligible employees will automatically build retirement savings, with contributions from you, the company, and the State. Here's what changes on your payslip..."
Prepare your line managers to handle 1:1 questions in January:
Deliverable: Communication pack ready for distribution in December 2025.
Get written confirmation from your payroll provider on:
Contingency options if gaps remain:
Deliverable: Service Level Agreement (SLA) with payroll provider covering AE support.
Final pre-launch test:
Success criteria:
Deliverable: Sign-off from Finance Director and Payroll Lead that systems are go-live ready.
Challenge: Eligibility toggles as workers move between projects and hours fluctuate week-to-week.
Solution:
Risk: Incorrectly enrolling someone not yet eligible, or missing someone who became eligible.
Challenge: High proportion of part-time employees, many hovering near the €20k threshold. Tips may or may not count toward earnings.
Solution:
Risk: Morale issues if staff feel uninformed or pressured about the €20k threshold.
Challenge: Mid-month joiners/leavers complicate pro-rata calculations and portal updates.
Solution:
Risk: Late enrolments trigger back-dated contribution requirements.
Some SMEs may legitimately avoid AE by maintaining or establishing a qualifying pension scheme. But this requires careful analysis—don't make assumptions.
How it works: If your current plan meets AE contribution minima and covers all eligible staff, those employees are exempt from auto-enrolment.
Requirements:
Benefit: You control contribution levels and can potentially cap at 3% instead of scaling to 6%.
Risk: If scheme design falls below AE standards, WRC can require retrospective enrolment.
Strategy: Introduce a company PRSA with 3% employer contributions in 2025 (before AE launches). This may exempt you from future step-ups to 4.5% and 6%.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
When it makes sense: SMEs with stable workforces, good margins, and desire for predictable pension costs.
When it doesn't: Micro-businesses where setup costs outweigh long-term savings, or high-turnover firms where admin burden exceeds benefits.
Critical: Take qualified advice. The Department of Social Protection will issue guidance on "qualifying scheme" criteria by 2027—early adopters may face retrospective adjustments if rules change.
Below are worked examples showing employer costs only across different business profiles. Use your actual payroll to refine.
Employee | Annual Pay | Eligible? | 2026 Cost | 2035 Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|
Director | €75,000 | No (Class S) | €0 | €0 |
Senior Consultant | €55,000 | Yes | €825 | €3,300 |
Consultant | €38,000 | Yes | €570 | €2,280 |
Junior Consultant | €28,000 | Yes | €420 | €1,680 |
Admin Assistant | €32,000 | Yes | €480 | €1,920 |
Total | €2,295/year | €9,180/year |
Monthly cash flow impact: €191 (2026) → €765 (2035)
Profile: 15 full-time staff (€32k avg), 10 part-time staff (5 over €20k threshold)
Category | Headcount | Avg Pay | 2026 Cost | 2035 Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|
Full-time eligible | 15 | €32,000 | €7,200 | €28,800 |
Part-time eligible | 5 | €24,000 | €1,800 | €7,200 |
Total | 20 | €9,000/year | €36,000/year |
Monthly cash flow impact: €750 (2026) → €3,000 (2035)
Seasonal consideration: If part-timers increase hours at Christmas and cross €20k, expect additional mid-year enrollments.
Profile: 40 site workers (variable hours), 10 office staff
Category | Headcount | Avg Pay | 2026 Cost | 2035 Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|
Site workers eligible | 30 | €35,000 | €15,750 | €63,000 |
Office staff eligible | 8 | €40,000 | €4,800 | €19,200 |
Total | 38 | €20,550/year | €82,200/year |
Monthly cash flow impact: €1,713 (2026) → €6,850 (2035)
Planning tip: Model the 2035 "steady state" cost now so pricing, wage negotiations, and budgets account for the phase-in. Don't let contribution step-ups collide with other cost pressures.
Use this as your internal project schedule:
Timeline | Action Items | Owner |
---|---|---|
October 2025 | Eligibility audit complete; NAERSA portal access requested; payroll gap analysis started | HR + Payroll |
November 2025 | UAT in payroll (test cycles); provider SLAs confirmed; cost model approved by board | Finance Director |
December 2025 | Staff briefing materials distributed; payroll and NAERSA connections tested; final dry run | All stakeholders |
1 January 2026 | AE goes live; first payroll cycle with contributions | Payroll Lead |
July 2026 | Month 7—first opt-out window opens (monitor employee requests) | HR Manager |
January 2028 | Re-enrolment for employees who opted out in 2026 | HR Manager |
January 2029 | Contribution rates increase to 3% (update payroll and budgets) | Finance Director |
Survey evidence:
Translation: Most of your competitors are behind. But that doesn't reduce your compliance obligation.
Consequences of late preparation:
A disciplined Q4 project now is cheaper than emergency remediation in mid-2026.
Clear accountability prevents tasks falling through cracks. Assign these roles explicitly:
Pro tip: Schedule a monthly AE steering meeting from October 2025 through March 2026 to track progress and resolve issues quickly.
Reality: Eligibility is based on total annual earnings, not hours worked. A part-timer earning €22k is fully covered.
Fix: Audit all staff, not just full-timers.
Reality: 58% of employers haven't validated their systems can handle AE calculations and file exchanges.
Fix: Run a December dry-run payroll before go-live.
Reality: Staff see a new payslip deduction without explanation and assume it's a mistake or pay cut.
Fix: Send clear announcements in December, provide FAQs, and brief managers.
Reality: Budgeting for 1.5% in 2026 without planning for 6% by 2035 creates nasty surprises.
Fix: Model the full phase-in schedule and integrate into long-term financial plans.
Reality: It's illegal to pressure employees to opt out. WRC can order compensation.
Fix: Present opt-out as a neutral employee choice; never incentivise or suggest it.
No. AE is administered centrally by NAERSA. Employers interact via the portal (or through their payroll agent). No broker commissions or individual policy setup required.
Use the same ROS credentials you (or your tax agent) use to access Revenue Online Services. Authentication is via MyGovID.
Members of a qualifying scheme are not auto-enrolled. But you must evidence that the scheme meets AE standards. Check with your pension provider or adviser.
No. Opt-out is only permitted during a two-month window starting six months after enrolment (months 7–8). Employees cannot opt out on day one.
Their pension pot follows them. The "pot-follows-member" model means the retirement account stays with the individual, transferring automatically to the new employer's AE contributions.
Yes. Pension contributions are allowable expenses for Corporation Tax, just like salaries and other payroll costs.
You have three options:
Best practice: Confirm provider readiness in writing now.
Amergin Consulting helps Irish SMEs navigate Auto-Enrolment with confidence. Our integrated approach combines payroll expertise, financial modelling, and regulatory compliance support.
✓ AE Readiness Assessment
60-minute diagnostic covering eligibility, payroll capability, cost impact, and compliance gaps.
✓ Payroll Configuration & Testing
Ensure your system calculates contributions correctly, handles opt-outs, and exchanges files with NAERSA.
✓ Multi-Year Cost Modelling
Detailed projections showing cash flow impact through 2035, with scenario analysis for growth and wage inflation.
✓ Employee Communication Packs
Templated letters, FAQs, and manager briefing scripts aligned to your business.
✓ Ongoing Compliance Support
Portal management, re-enrolment tracking, and regulatory updates as AE rules evolve.
Proven SME expertise: Over 500 Irish businesses supported across retail, construction, professional services, and hospitality.
Practical, not theoretical: We focus on what works in real payroll environments, not generic compliance checklists.
Fixed-fee transparency: No surprises—clear pricing for AE readiness projects.
Integrated advisory: AE sits alongside our payroll, financial advisory, and statutory compliance services.
Auto-Enrolment is not optional, and the deadline is not flexible. 1 January 2026 will arrive whether you're ready or not.
The difference between a smooth rollout and a crisis? Action taken in Q4 2025.
SMEs that complete this checklist will enter 2026 with:
Those that delay will face payroll errors, employee disputes, supplier queues, and last-minute costs.
The choice is simple: prepare now or scramble later.
Book your complimentary 60-minute AE Readiness Assessment with Amergin Consulting.
We'll audit your eligibility data, test payroll capability, model cost impact, and hand you a practical action plan—aligned to Amergin's proven AE implementation framework.
No obligation. No jargon. Just clear answers to help you enter 2026 with confidence.
Schedule your free AE Readiness Check → Book now
Amergin Consulting Ltd. is a Dublin-based consultancy specialising in SME financial advisory, payroll, and compliance services.
Our integrated approach helps SMEs navigate complex legislative changes—from GDPR and the Work-Life Balance Act 2023 to Statutory Sick Pay and Auto-Enrolment 2026—with practical, cost-effective solutions designed for businesses without dedicated HR or compliance teams.
This publication provides general information and does not constitute financial, legal, or pension advice. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, Auto-Enrolment regulations continue to evolve. SME owners should consult qualified professional advisors for guidance on specific situations. Compliance with applicable regulations remains each business owner's responsibility.
Gov.ie: AE overview, eligibility criteria, 1 January 2026 launch confirmation, employer portal via ROS
Citizens Information: Scheme start date, opt-out timing, contribution rates, and phase-in schedule
Zellis Research: 79% employer unpreparedness statistic
NAERSA/TCS: Department of Social Protection confirmation of TCS as managed service provider; Oireachtas written answers on administration structure
Irish Association of Pension Funds (IAPF): Technical guidance on file flows and Auto-Enrolment Payroll Numbers (AEPN)
Irish Statute Book: Automatic Enrolment Retirement Savings System Act 2024