Personal pensions may be suitable if you're employed and not in a company pension scheme, or as an addition to a company pension. You may also wish to set up a personal pension if you are self-employed or if you are not working but can afford to put aside money for retirement.
With a personal pension you pay a regular amount, usually every month or every year, or a lump sum to the pension provider who will invest it on your behalf. The fund is usually run by financial organisations such as building societies, banks, insurance companies, and unit trusts companies.
The final value of your pension fund will depend on how much you have contributed and how well the fund's investments have performed. The companies that run these pensions charge you for starting up and running your pension. Charges are normally deducted from your fund in the form of fund management charges.
Contribution Levels and Tax Relief
From 6 April 2011 there will be the ability to carry forward unused contributions from the previous
three years (ie back to 2010/2011 for 2013/14), potentially enabling contributions of up to £200,000 in a
particular year. HMRC have confirmed that you do not need to have made a contribution to a
pension scheme in a year to be able to carry forward unused allowances – you simply need to have been a
member.
For each pound you contribute to your scheme, the pension provider claims tax back from the government at the basic rate of 20 per cent. In practice, this means that for every £80 you pay into your pension, you end up with £100 in your pension pot.
If you're on the higher tax rate of 40 per cent, you'll still get 40 per cent tax relief for any money you put into your pension. But the way that the money is given back to you is different:
- The first 20 per cent is claimed back from HMRC by your pension scheme in the same way as for a lower rate taxpayer.
- It's up to you then to claim back the other 20 per cent when you fill in your annual tax return, or, for example, by claiming by letter to your Tax Office.
- If you don't pay tax, the most you can pay in with tax relief is £2,880 a year. But you'll still get basic rate (20 per cent) tax relief. In other words the government will 'top up' your contribution so that £3,600 is invested.
- Your pension fund will invest the money you save (including the tax relief amount) in your pension. Your pension fund growth may be free of tax.
- Any rise in the value of the scheme's assets between what you put in and what they're worth at the end is called capital gains and is tax-free.
Drawing your Personal Pension
You can take up to 25 per cent of the value of your total pension savings from all sources as a tax-free lump sum when you retire, up to a maximum of 25 per cent of the lifetime allowance. The lifetime allowance for the tax year 2013/2014 tax year is £1.50 million.
You then have two broad options:
- Use the rest of the fund you have built up to buy an annuity (a regular income payable for life) from a life insurance company; this does not have to be the same company that you have your pension plan with.
- Take an income (taxed at your normal Income Tax rate) from the remainder of your fund while it continues to be invested.
If your total pensions savings exceed the lifetime allowance you have two choices:
- If you take the excess as a taxed lump sum, the excess amount is taxed at 55 per cent.
- If you take the excess as income, the excess amount is taxed at 25 per cent; income taken from your pension pot will then be taxed at your usual Income Tax rate
If your total pension savings from all sources is £18,000 or less you may be able to take the whole amount as a cash lump sum, with 25 per cent tax-free.
There are more tax advantages to having a pension scheme:
- Your pension fund will invest the money you save (including the tax relief amount) in your pension. Your pension fund growth may be free of tax.
- Any rise in the value of the scheme's assets between what you put in and what they're worth at the end is called capital gains and is tax-free.
- When you come to take benefits you may be able to draw out up to a quarter of the value of your stakeholder or personal pension fund as a tax-free lump sum. Your pension provider will be able to tell you whether or not you will be able to do this. That lump sum could in turn be used to purchase a tax efficient annuity.
Putting money into someone else's personal pension.
You can put money into someone else's personal pension – like your husband, wife, civil partner, child or grandchild's. They'll get tax relief added to it at the basic rate, but this won't affect your own tax bill. If they've got no income, you can pay in up to £2,880 a year (which becomes £3,600 with tax relief).
For example, if you put £80 into a spouse or civil partner's pension scheme, the government would put in £20, so their pension pot would increase to £100. Your tax would remain the same.
The value of units can fall as well as rise, and you may not get back all of your original investment.