flook
Well-Known Member
ah ok that makes more sense, me being a bit dumb there I think :)I think the average life expectancy was 66,so one year after getting the pension, it is now 78 so 12 years after.
ah ok that makes more sense, me being a bit dumb there I think :)I think the average life expectancy was 66,so one year after getting the pension, it is now 78 so 12 years after.
Join the club.ah ok that makes more sense, me being a bit dumb there I think :)
Not sure to be honest! I just saw the poster mention something about all the parties looking to get rid of the state pension and responded to that.Isn't the discussion mainly about private pensions though? People with private pensions losing out on a state pension because they have a private one?
If she changed say 25% tax free down to 20% would that be immediate or from April 2026?I'd be amazed if anything she announces would come in within at least a couple of years and I suspect that may be the maximum you can pay in or the tax relief applicable.
It's impossible to say but governments in the past have faced massive criticism for making immediate changes to pensions and disrupting long made plans. So anything significant you would expect a long lead in. If its minor tweaks then they could be immediate.If she changed say 25% tax free down to 20% would that be immediate or from April 2026?
I turn 55 next Feb and was thinking of pulling 25% out of a pot and lumping it on my mortgage. I'll still be working but paying more in to another pot to offset what I've just pulled out.
However it's made up you're limited to £268000 of TFC. I genuinely don't see there being a big reduction, if any, of TFC in the short/medium term. Imagine you were about to retire with a TFC of £250000 intending to pay off your interest only £250K mortgage and suddenly the limit was £200k leaving you with a £50k shortfall. It's political suicide. Giving 10 years' notice, maybe."25% gets fixed at the time you drawdown the first bit" of all pots or the pot I'm pulling out of?
To be clear I have 2 pots, one where I'm pulling from which has grown with no contributions for a few years and my current work one which is growing every month with contributions.
I didn't know that!"25% gets fixed at the time you drawdown the first bit" of all pots or the pot I'm pulling out of?
To be clear I have 2 pots, one where I'm pulling from which has grown with no contributions for a few years and my current work one which is growing every month with contributions.
You can.I didn't know that!
I thought if say I had £300k in avsingle fund, I could draw out £50k a year with 12.5 being tax free, 12.5 tax free allowance and the 25 subject to tax and continue to leave the 250 funds where they are
You're saying that once any amount has been accessed, no matter how small the whole lot has to be moved
Nope. Not asking anything. Just stating mathematical facts.So would you ask the 90 year old woman to go back to work?
Nice cop-out answer.Let's wait and see. Time will be the judge on that particular issue.
You can draw as much as you like when you like. The tax bit is where it gets a little complicated, the tax free bit is crystallised across all your funds on the date you first make a drawdown.I didn't know that!
I thought if say I had £300k in avsingle fund, I could draw out £50k a year with 12.5 being tax free, 12.5 tax free allowance and the 25 subject to tax and continue to leave the 250 funds where they are
You're saying that once any amount has been accessed, no matter how small the whole lot has to be moved
I did not say you were 90. Your rephrased statement is more accurate. Thanks.Are you saying I'm 90??!!
I agree with you being pedantic, I will rephrase, I was in full employment, without claiming any state benefits until I retired.
Yesok last (stupid) question. These are just random numbers to make it easier to understand.
Assume pot 1 has 400K - no current contributions
Assume pot 2 has grown to 500K - after paying into for a number of years after taking 25% from pot 1
Assuming Rachel from accounts doesn't change anything.
You take 25% tax free from pot 1 (100k). Leaving 300k. That crystallizes leaving 300k. I assume you can just leave it there to grow and not take a drawdown/annuity?
You retire some years later, you have already taken 100k from pot1, so you can take 25% tax free from pot 2 at that point(125k out of the 500k which, combined with the 100k you already took doesn't breach 268k) assuming the thresholds dont change. Does that sound about right?
Its about 86.5 k more than me . So i would say its not bad . I am also 11 years olderI’m 40 and have 87k in work place pension pot… is that ok ?
Its about 86.5 k more than me . So i would say its not bad . I am also 11 years older
You can draw as much as you like when you like. The tax bit is where it gets a little complicated, the tax free bit is crystallised across all your funds on the date you first make a drawdown.
Unless I am misunderstanding things, these two answers seems to be contradictory.