Your Pension Matters: From The Day You Start Work
Your Pension Matters: From The Day You Start Work
YOUR PENSION
MATTERS
State and workplace pensions are changing and this will affect you. The Chancellor
announced further measures in his 2014 Budget, most of them effective from April
2015. It is never too soon and rarely too late to start putting extra money aside for
retirement, and the taxman will chip in too.
Lee Gardner
Unit 8
Hatton Technology Park
Dark Lane
Hatton
CV35 8XB
T: 01564 732770
F: 0870 2203049
E: [email protected]
Y O U R P E N S I O N M AT T E R S
THE Pensions
world is changing
The State Pension is getting a major overhaul after failing its MOT. The Government will bring
in a flat rate pension, equivalent to about 148.40 per week at 2014-15 values, in April 2016.
These changes and revised National Insurance rates will have an impact. Those people that
have built up extra entitlement under the various earnings related schemes would be wise to
seek advice. It is important for the higher earners in this category to check out the impact on
their expected pension income.
The switch to a flat rate pension is a reminder of the risks of relying on state provision; another
reminder is the phased raising of the State Pension Age for men and women to 67 by 2028
and possibly to 70 or more eventually. The State Pensions flat rate will be a ceiling but not a
floor. Ten years of NI contributions will be needed to qualify for any pension and 35 years for
the full flat rate, including years added during employment breaks taken while raising a family.
Y O U R P E N S I O N M AT T E R S
Y O U R P E N S I O N M AT T E R S
Getting personal
Whatever stage of your working life you may be at currently, this changing world of pensions dictates that you
should put the more immediate day-to-day demands to one side for a moment and contemplate an old age
fraught with financial pressures. There are ways to supplement your expected pension income, from AVCs
(additional voluntary contributions) to personal pensions, that enable you to increase your level of tax-relieved
saving towards a higher pension income.
With your contributions enhanced by the addition of tax relief, long-term investment in assets with growth
potential through a personal pension, or a group personal pension provided by your employer (some are being
set up for auto enrolment), could make a big difference to your retirement. Some high earners, business owners
and directors may, however, prefer less restrictive alternatives that allow their pension savings to provide for
their retirement and aid their business in the meantime.
Y O U R P E N S I O N M AT T E R S
Sassy by nature
A SSAS can also make investment choices
from a wider range of options than a normal
pension, involving added opportunities
but also risks that you need to think about.
The scheme can be tailored on a one
member or multi-member basis. It can
invest in much the same range of assets
as a SIPP and can similarly borrow within
limits, whether from a commercial lender
or a connected person on commercial
terms. Employer contributions can usually
offset corporation tax.
The added freedom of choice and
possibility of higher returns that go
with some asset classes and the use of
borrowed funds make professional advice
essential when contemplating a SIPP or
SSAS; some assets, for instance, involve
a greater degree of price volatility or risk
of loss. That said, the flexibility continues,
as you can crystallise pension benefits any
time from age 55, using annuity purchase
or the pension drawdown option now
more readily available under the April 2015
pension freedoms.
Y O U R P E N S I O N M AT T E R S
Y O U R P E N S I O N M AT T E R S
Take control
of your pension
outlook now
It is important to take professional advice before making any decision relating to your personal finances. Information
within this document is based on our current understanding of taxation and can be subject to change in future. It does
not provide individual tailored investment advice and is for guidance only. Some rules may vary in different parts of the
UK; please ask for details. We cannot assume legal liability for any errors or omissions it might contain. Levels and bases
of, and reliefs from taxation are those currently applying or proposed and are subject to change; their value depends
on the individual circumstances of the investor.
The value of investments can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount you invested. The past
is not a guide to future performance and past performance may not necessarily be repeated. If you withdraw from an
investment in the early years, you may not get back the full amount you invested. Changes in the rates of exchange may
have an adverse effect on the value or price of an investment in sterling terms if it is denominated in a foreign currency.
The content in these articles is written and supplied by the Outsourced Marketing Department.
Gardner Financial Management is an appointed representative of Select Mortgages UK ltd who are authorised and regulated by the
Financial Conduct Authority.