This can be due to several reasons.
This may partly be because Lifeplan lacks information about any insurance that MinPension, on the other hand, includes. If so, please contact us at support@lifeplan.se and we will look into it.
It may also be the case that you have part of your pension in a defined benefit pension, for example ITP2. This means that you will receive a certain amount every month for as long as you live once you retire.
In our overview, Lifeplan shows both your regular insurances - how much they are worth in Swedish SEK - and in addition to that the sum you will receive per month for the rest of your life from your defined benefit insurance.
MinPension.se shows your regular insurances, just like Lifeplan does, how much they are worth in Swedish SEK. Then they also assume that you will live a certain number of years and shows the amount you would have received per month as long as you live in a total sum instead. Lifeplan makes no assumptions about how long you will live, so we show you what we know separately, that is the amount you will receive per month for as long as you live.
This method of reporting an estimated total sum, which MinPension does, often makes up the difference between the capital sums.
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