ChatterBank1 min ago
Am Not The Brightest
re the latest on pensions, savings etc but is it true one is only allowed £10,000 savings, is there no winter fuel allowance this year for pensioners, who received pension credits.
if you have more £10,000 savings does that mean your rent is no longer paid for - sorry - just don't know
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by JinnyJoan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Only pensioners who get pension credit will get the Winter Fuel Allowance from this yesterday.
If you have £10,000 or less in savings and investments this will not affect your Pension Credit.
If you have more than £10,000, every £500 over £10,000 counts as £1 income a week. For example, if you have £11,000 in savings, this counts as £2 income a week. Your income must not exceed £218.15 a week to qualify for pension credit
//Question Author
i have never been on pension credit but I always got the WFA - newarmy - what about the savings business. Are you only allowed £10,000 savings//
You're conflating two issues jinnyjoan.
Savings over £10K affect entitlement to pension credit. You don't get pension credit- presumably you don't qualify, either because of your savings or your income.
If you aren't entitled to pension credit you'll no longer receive a winter fuel allowance.
//You don't get pension credit- presumably you don't qualify, either because of your savings or your income.//
But it's said that over a million who should qualify for pension credit don't actually claim it. So it's worth sitting down with someone who knows (CitizensAdvice/ Age Concern?), going through your finances & making a claim if you DO qualify.
Does that mean you would have supported the Cons on this issue if when in government they'd proposed to cut WFA for most pensioners.
Anyway, it's interesting to know you support it now and will no doubt support other cuts in spending or tax rises.
There is one person, an ally of yours, who has been very quiet on this issue which is a shame.
I think a fairer way would have been to tax all WFAs at each pensioner's marginal rate- so they'd have got 20% or 40% of the WFA back from the better off pensioners, and those just above the pension credit threshold would have still got all or most of their WFA.
//I think a fairer way would have been to tax all WFAs at each pensioner's marginal rate//
Actually thats a good idea, hadnt thought of that one. Plus it costs very little to do that. My guess is that there wont be much saved this year due to the admin of it all. They could find themselves out of pocked too if all those elegible start claiming the credit, and there are a fair few that dont at the moment.