In a landmark move that signals the further consolidation of the British life insurance and savings market, the Dutch financial giant Aegon has reached a definitive agreement to sell its UK insurance business to Standard Life (the primary retail brand of Phoenix Group) for a total value of £2 billion ($2.7 billion).
The transaction, which follows months of speculation regarding Aegon’s commitment to the UK, will create a retirement savings behemoth managing nearly £480 billion in assets for roughly 16 million customers.
For Aegon, the exit represents a strategic pivot toward the United States, while for Standard Life, it solidifies its position as the UK’s second-largest retail pensions and savings platform.
What are the key terms of the £2 billion deal?
The acquisition is structured as a sophisticated mix of cash and equity, designed to align the long-term interests of both financial institutions.
- Upfront Consideration: Standard Life will pay £750 million in cash.
- Equity Stake: Aegon will receive 181.1 million shares in Standard Life, representing a 15.3% stake in the company.
- Board Representation: Following the deal’s completion, Aegon will be the largest single shareholder in Standard Life and will be entitled to appoint one non-executive director to its board.
The deal values Aegon’s UK arm at approximately 14.2 times its 2025 operating result after tax. Aegon has confirmed that the cash proceeds will be used to reduce debt and fund a significant share buyback programme for its investors.
Why is Aegon exiting the UK insurance market?
The sale marks the end of an era for Aegon in the UK, a market it has occupied since the 1990s through its acquisition of Scottish Equitable. The primary driver for this exit is a global strategic shift:
- The American Pivot: Aegon CEO Lard Friese has been vocal about refocusing the group’s capital on the United States, where it operates under the Transamerica brand. The US market offers higher margins and a larger scale for its core life and health products.
- Asset Management Retention: Notably, Aegon is not selling its UK-based asset management arm. Aegon Asset Management will remain part of the global group and will act as a key investment partner for Standard Life moving forward.
- Capital Efficiency: The sale is expected to boost Aegon’s free cash flow run-rate by 5% per year between 2025 and 2027, as the company offloads the “capital-heavy” requirements of maintaining a vast UK insurance book.
How will this affect current Aegon UK policyholders?
For the millions of UK residents with workplace pensions, SIPPs, or life insurance policies with Aegon, the immediate message is one of continuity.
- Policy Security: All existing contracts remain legally binding. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) will oversee the transfer to ensure customer protections are maintained.
- Platform Migration: Over the next 24 months, Aegon customers are expected to be migrated onto Standard Life’s digital platforms. Standard Life has pledged an annual £160 million profit boost from integration, which they suggest will be reinvested into digital tools for retirees.
- Service Delivery: While the brands may merge, the fundamental investment choices within workplace pensions are unlikely to change overnight, though the underlying administration will transition to Phoenix Group’s (Standard Life) scalable technology stack.
What is the impact on jobs in Edinburgh and London?
The “Aegon UK sale” has significant implications for the UK’s financial geography, particularly in Edinburgh, where both companies have a massive footprint.
The Edinburgh “Super-Hub”
Aegon’s headquarters at Edinburgh Park and Standard Life’s historic presence in the city make the Scottish capital the epicentre of this merger. While the deal creates a “savings giant,” it also creates overlaps in:
- Back-office administration
- IT and platform maintenance
- Marketing and corporate functions
Industry analysts expect Standard Life to seek “synergies,” which is often a corporate euphemism for potential redundancies as they streamline two separate workforces into one.
London and Regional Impact
While the core administrative work is in Scotland, the London-based investment and corporate strategy teams will also see shifts as Standard Life integrates Aegon’s retail book into its broader FTSE 100 operations.
What the Leaders Are Saying
“This is a major milestone in our journey to focus on our most successful businesses. In Standard Life, we have found a partner that shares our commitment to UK savers. This deal allows us to remain invested in the UK’s success through our shareholding while freeing up capital for our US expansion.” Lard Friese, CEO of Aegon
“We are creating the UK’s premier retirement savings and income business. By adding Aegon’s scale to our own, we can deliver better value, better digital tools, and more security for 16 million people across the country.” Andy Briggs, CEO of Standard Life (Phoenix Group)
What happens next? A Timeline for the Public
The deal is not immediate and must pass several hurdles before it is finalised.
- Regulatory Scrutiny (Mid-2026): The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) may review the deal to ensure it doesn’t negatively impact competition in the workplace pension market.
- Shareholder Votes: Investors in both companies will need to formally approve the deal structure.
- Completion (End of 2026): Aegon and Standard Life expect the legal transfer to be completed by the fourth quarter of 2026.
- Customer Migration (2027-2028): Physical migration of pension data and rebranding of the Aegon UK portal to Standard Life is expected to take place throughout 2027.



