Lifetime allowance for pension savings

Lifetime allowance for pension savings

The lifetime allowance is a limit on the value of payouts from your pension schemes – whether lump sums or retirement income – that can be made without triggering an extra tax charge.

How much is the lifetime allowance?
The lifetime allowance for most people is £1.25 million in the tax year 2015/16 (reduced from £1.5 million in 2013/14 and falling to £1 million from 6 April 2016). It applies to the total of all the pensions you have, including the value of pensions promised through any Defined Benefit schemes you belong to, but excluding your State Pension.

Protecting your lifetime allowance
If your total pension savings exceed £1.25 million, you may be able to apply for protection – called ‘Individual Protection 2014′.

Individual Protection 2014

Availability
Individual Protection 2014 (IP2014) is only available if the value of your pension savings on 5 April 2014 was over £1.25 million.

If you have applied for protection in the past on other occasions when the lifetime allowance was reduced, you might not be eligible to apply for protection again now.

Level of protection
Completing HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) form IP2014 will give you a protected lifetime allowance equal to the value of your pension savings on 5 April 2014 subject to an overall maximum of £1.5 million.

Can you continue saving into a pension?
Yes, you can continue saving into a pension, but any pension savings above the protected lifetime allowance will be liable for tax on the excess called the ‘lifetime allowance charge’.

How to apply
There is a three-year period in which you can apply for IP2014 (6 April 2014 to 5 April 2017). You will have up to 5 April 2017 to submit your IP2014 application to HMRC.

The protection rules are complicated, and the ways in which the protection can be lost differ depending on whether your retirement income (including lump sums) is provided from a Defined Contribution or a Defined Benefit pension scheme.

Working out if this applies to you
Every time a payout from your pension schemes starts, its value is compared against your remaining lifetime allowance to see if there is additional tax to pay. You can work out whether you are likely to be affected by adding up the expected value of your payouts.

You work out the value of pensions differently depending on the type of scheme you are in:

• For defined contribution pension
schemes, including all personal pensions, the value of your benefits will be the value of your pension pot used to fund your retirement income and any lump sum
• For defined benefit pension schemes, you calculate the total value by multiplying your expected annual pension by 20. In addition, you need to add to this the amount of any tax- free cash lump sum if it is additional to the pension. In many schemes, you would only get a lump sum by giving up some pension, in which case the value of the full pension captures the full value of your payouts. So you are likely to be affected by the lifetime allowance in 2015/16 if you are on track for a final salary pension (with no separate lump sum) of more than £62,500 a year or a salary-related
pension over £46,875, plus the maximum tax-free cash lump sum
• Note that certain tax-free lump sum benefits paid out to your survivors if you die before age 75 also use up lifetime allowance
• Whenever you start taking money from your pension, a statement from your scheme should tell you how much
of your lifetime allowance you are
using up

Charges if you exceed the lifetime allowance
If the cumulative value of the payouts from your pension pots, including the value of the payouts from any Defined Benefit schemes, exceeds the lifetime allowance, there will be tax on the excess – called the ‘lifetime allowance charge’.

The way the charge applies depends on whether you receive the money from your pension as a lump sum or as part of regular retirement income.

Lump sums
Any amount over your lifetime allowance that you take as a lump sum is taxed at 55%. Your pension scheme administrator should deduct the tax and pay it over to HMRC, paying the balance to you.

Income
Any amount over your lifetime allowance that you take as a regular retirement income – for instance, by buying an annuity – attracts a lifetime allowance charge of 25%. This is on top of any tax payable on the income in the usual way.

For Defined Contribution pension schemes, your pension scheme administrator should pay the 25% tax to HMRC out of your pension pot, leaving you with the remaining 75% to use towards your retirement income.

For example, suppose someone who pays tax at the higher rate had expected to get £1,000 a year as income but the 25% lifetime allowance reduced this to £750 a year. After Income Tax at 40%, the person would be left with £450 a year. This means the lifetime allowance charge and Income Tax combined have reduced the income by 55% – the same as the lifetime allowance charge had the benefits been taken as a lump sum instead of income.

For Defined Benefit pension schemes, your pension scheme may decide to pay the tax on your behalf and recover it from you by reducing your pension.

If you wish to avoid the lifetime 
allowance charge, it’s important to monitor the value of your pensions, and especially the value of changes to any Defined Benefit pensions as these can
be surprisingly large.

How to avoid losing your Fixed Protection
With Fixed Protection (but not Individual Protection), the protection is lost if you build up any new pension savings. Therefore, you should be particularly careful if your employer automatically enrols you into a pension scheme at work. You will need to opt out of the workplace pension scheme or you will lose the Fixed Protection.

To avoid losing this protection you must:
• Make sure you opt out of automatic enrolment promptly – you usually have a one-month window to do this and get your contribution refunded
• Not make any further payments into any Defined Contribution pension scheme – if you do, you’ll automatically lose your protection and revert back to the current limit
• Think carefully before continuing as an active member of a Defined Benefits scheme – opting out of active membership and becoming a deferred member significantly reduces the risk of losing your protection

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