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Pension lump sums
slaterp
Posts: 12 Forumite
Hi I am in the fortunate position to be receiving a pension and also working as well.
I received a pension lump sum back in 2001, £30K of which was tax free. I am now in a position where I can retire from work and draw my pension from my current provider. Will I be able to receive a tax free lump sum from my current provider?
Both pension schemes were final salary type.
I received a pension lump sum back in 2001, £30K of which was tax free. I am now in a position where I can retire from work and draw my pension from my current provider. Will I be able to receive a tax free lump sum from my current provider?
Both pension schemes were final salary type.
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Comments
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Tax free lump sums are normally available but it's often a bad idea to take them from final salary pensions. Often you get a fairly small lump sum compared to teh amount of income given up. If you can say what the options are it'd be possible to say which look like a good or bad deal.0
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I'd need to request the figure if I wanted to re-invest the lump sum. The scheme normally gives a lump sum of 3 times the annual pension.0
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thats correct, and with the cs classic scheme the inverse rate at 60 is about 4.9%Some schemes won't allow inverse commutation which is what would be needed on schemes where the lump sum is automatic.
now you could invest that in a s&s isa and over the long term it should grow at at least 5% if not more
it's a tricky decision - take lump sum or commute?
fj0 -
bigfreddiel wrote: »it's a tricky decision - take lump sum or commute?
Unless there is some special feature such as debts to clear, poor health, family history of being particularly long-lived or short-lived ....
Interest rates are very low at the moment: there must be some people for whom a good wheeze would be to take the larger pension while borrowing the money to fund some long-desired purchase. The loan would be paid back out of the larger pension.Free the dunston one next time too.0 -
Thanks for the comments its always a tough decision. Am I going to live for ever (in which case take the larger pension) or an I going to die tomorrow (in which case take the lump sum). Chrystal balls required I think.
The main answer is I should be able to take a tax free lump sum, when offered, and Mr Goverments not going to step in and want his slice.0 -
The OP was talking about a final salary pension so nothing to do with annuity or drawdown.
However, out of interest, what pensions will not allow 25% tax free lump sum to be taken?
If by taking the full 25% lump sum it would make the pension in payment lower than the minimum income guaranttee then only a lower level of TFLS could be taken.0
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