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New Pension Rules

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interele | 18:01 Sun 22nd Mar 2015 | Personal Finance
10 Answers
This is the scenario

Job income £30
Pension fund £100000

If I took the whole lot as cash on my 55th birthday and kept working

1. Job income would be taxed the same
2. I would lose my £10k tax allowance
3 I would get the first £25000 tax free on the pension fund
4 I would pay basic rate tax on the next £10000 or so
5 I would pay 40% on the rest

Is this basically correct ? - I would get proper advice
when the time came but it this generally right

Ta

M
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If you just consider your earnings of £30k and take none of your pension pot you will see deductions of £3,880 income tax and £2,632 National Insurance, a total of £6,512 . Looking now at the pension pot, you can take your £25k tax free leaving you with £75k to worry about. If you took all of it and had it taxed as earnings in a single year you would have a...
17:07 Mon 23rd Mar 2015
Doesn't look like it.

Why would you lose your tax allowance. Everyone gets £10500 fro 6 April 2015. You would get your 25k tax free from pension why not take an income from the other £75k or spread it over 3 years to keep yourself in the basic rate tax band. You do not say how often you get the £30 is it a day, week month, year?
Question Author
Sorry - typo £30k per year

I thought the tax allowance was reduced once your income in a given year exceeds £40k
The removal of the £10K personal allowance is phased in once income exceeds £100000. The personal allowance reduces where the individual’s income is above this limit by £1 for every £2 above the limit.
Under your scenario the £100K figure would be breached so your allowance would be reduced. I'm not sure whether you'd lose just some of it or all of it. If the 25% tax free bit doesn't count then you'll keep some allowance.

One more thing though- are you sure it's the sort of pension where you can take it all as a lump sum? If it's a public sector or company scheme I don't think you can.
Question Author
It's a private pension. The only reason I'm considering cashing it in is that I now work for a local authority - the pay is rubbish but the pension is spectacular
Ok that would change my answer completely, you will need some independent advice.
If you just consider your earnings of £30k and take none of your pension pot you will see deductions of £3,880 income tax and £2,632 National Insurance, a total of £6,512 .

Looking now at the pension pot, you can take your £25k tax free leaving you with £75k to worry about. If you took all of it and had it taxed as earnings in a single year you would have a taxable income of £105k for the year. Your personal tax free allowance will reduce by £2,500 to £8,100 (it reduces by £1 for every £2 you earn over £100k). You will therefore pay tax on £96,900. You will pay 20% on this income between £8,100 and £39,885 which is £6,357. You will pay 40% on the remaining £65,115 which is £26,046. So your total tax bill will be £32,403. However there is also National Insurance to consider. The NI threshold kicks in at £8,060. You pay 12% between this lower threshold and £42,380 which is £4,118. You then pay 2% on your remaining £62,620 which is £1,252 making your total NI bill £5,370. So your total deductions for the year will be £37,773.

In taking the extra £75k you will see additional deductions of £31,261 (41%). This means you will be left with just £43,739.

To minimise this extra tax burden you need to keep the amount you draw to below the higher rate income tax threshold. For next financial year this is £42,385, meaning you can take £12k or so. You would then lose “only” 32% of any amount you draw (20% income tax and 12% National Insurance).
My provider told me that the 75% will be taxed at 45% initially and adjusted accordingly at the end of the tax year.The tax man will be rubbing his hands in April.
My only query on New Judge's comprehensive answer is that I'm not sure NI would be levied on the money withdrawn from the pension pot.
Actually, now I think about it, neither am I f-f. I'll make some enquiries.
Yes you’re quite right, f-f. No NI is payable on pension pot withdrawals.

This reduces interele’s additional deductions by near enough £3,100, making them £28,161 in total, or 37.5% of the £75k. Of course this does not alter the amount he needs to consider taking to minimise his tax deductions.

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