What are the retirement savings options for a business director in 2026?
May 25, 2026 — 3 min. read

As a business director, your retirement does not rely solely on mandatory schemes. Discover the key savings options available in 2026 and how to build a structured retirement strat
It also depends on the savings solutions you put in place.
Individual retirement savings plan, company retirement savings plan, employee savings, quarter buy-back... There are many options. But which one should you choose to optimize your situation?
Here is a clear breakdown to help you structure your retirement strategy.
The individual retirement savings plan (PER)
The individual retirement savings plan (PERin) is currently one of the most widely used vehicles by business directors.
It allows you to:
- Build long-term savings
- Benefit from tax-deductible contributions (within certain limits)
- Choose between a lump-sum or annuity payout
Its main advantage lies in the immediate tax benefit.
The higher your marginal tax bracket, the more relevant the deduction can be.
The company retirement savings plan
If you have employees, you can set up:
- A collective retirement savings plan
- A mandatory retirement savings plan
These options allow you to:
- Involve your team in retirement savings
- Optimize compensation for employees and/or the director at a lower cost than a bonus, raise, or dividends
- Benefit from a specific tax and social contribution framework
For the director, this can serve as an additional lever for building capital.
Employee savings schemes
Profit-sharing, incentive plans, employer matching contributions... Employee savings schemes can also contribute to your retirement strategy.
They offer several advantages:
- A favorable tax framework
- Progressive capital accumulation
- A collective approach
They must be consistent with your overall compensation policy.
Buying back missing quarters
If your career includes incomplete periods, you may consider buying back quarters.
This allows you to:
- Increase the number of validated quarters
- Reduce the pension discount
- Improve the amount of your pension
This option requires a detailed analysis of the cost versus the actual benefit.
Balancing retirement savings and wealth strategy
Retirement savings do not exist in isolation.
They must be integrated with:
- Your compensation strategy
- Your overall tax position
- Your business transfer plans
- The future valuation of your company
Accumulating savings products without an overall vision can create inconsistencies.
The right question is always: What is the gap between your projected pension and your target standard of living?
The most common mistakes
Among business directors, we often see:
- Opening a retirement savings plan without prior analysis
- Underusing available tax deduction allowances
- A lack of coordination between social status and savings
- An overly short-term mindset
- No regular review to adapt to changes in professional and personal circumstances
The result: savings vehicles that are open but poorly optimized.
Our approach at Fifty Bees
At Fifty Bees, we analyze retirement savings from a holistic perspective:
- Simulation of your future pension
- Identification of the gap to bridge
- Selection of the right savings vehicles
- Consistent tax optimization
- Integration with your wealth strategy
Goal: turn retirement savings into a structured lever, not a scattered accumulation.
Want to know which solution is right for your situation?
A brief discussion can help you:
- Clarify your objectives
- Identify the most relevant vehicles
- Optimize your contributions
- Secure your retirement trajectory
Your retirement is not limited to a single financial product. It is built within a comprehensive strategy.
Let's talk to structure your retirement savings today.