We'd like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum. This is to keep it a safe and useful space for MoneySaving discussions. Threads that are - or become - political in nature may be removed in line with the Forum’s rules. Thank you for your understanding.
We're aware that dates on the Forum are not currently showing correctly. Please bear with us while we get this fixed, and see Site feedback for updates.
Salary Sacrifice contribution cap?

sterlingstash
Posts: 175 Forumite
For those of you who's firms allow you to make pension contributions via salary sacrifice - do they put a cap on the amount you put in (either absolute or a percentage) other than the requirement not to go below national minimum wage.
We have a 10% limit and I'm wondering if I could make the case to increase it, as with little in the way of employer contributions on top, this seems low for adequate retirement planning and may be discouraging sensible contribution levels.
We have a 10% limit and I'm wondering if I could make the case to increase it, as with little in the way of employer contributions on top, this seems low for adequate retirement planning and may be discouraging sensible contribution levels.
0
Comments
-
No cap on our contributions and an employer contribution of 7%.0
-
OHs company allow 15% max, mine don't even do a pension yet :-(0
-
No limit at my company - in fact I see no reason for having one.0
-
No cap here. I pay 9% into a final salary scheme and am currently considering making additional contributions into a defined contributions scheme.0
-
No limit at my company - in fact I see no reason for having one.
Yes, that would have been my view. However, I think the reasoning behind the limit was to minimize the risk of employees falling too heavily into the pitfalls of salary sacrifice eg maternity pay, NI contributions and other benefits like life assurance.
It is useful to hear that a cap isn;t the norm0 -
sterlingstash wrote: »Yes, that would have been my view. However, I think the reasoning behind the limit was to minimize the risk of employees falling too heavily into the pitfalls of salary sacrifice eg maternity pay, NI contributions and other benefits like life assurance.
It is useful to hear that a cap this the norm
At my company, benefits like life assurance are based on the pre-salary sacrifice salary.0 -
Mine's half of pay. Might be individual exceptions, no harm to ask. It might be due to a worry that an employee could leave themselves short of income.
Life assurance shouldn't be a factor. That would normally be calculated on the scheme salary, the one before sacrifice.
Maternity can be strongly to the advantage of the employee because the employer is required to pay the full sacrifice amount into the pension, though the SMP would be lower than without sacrifice.0 -
Maternity can be strongly to the advantage of the employee because the employer is required to pay the full sacrifice amount into the pension, though the SMP would be lower than without sacrifice.
Ah, so it could be very costly for the company to offer uncapped contributions to everyone then. That might well be it!0 -
Yes. One trick that can be used is to start a large sacrifice just before taking maternity leave...0
-
sterlingstash wrote: »For those of you who's firms allow you to make pension contributions via salary sacrifice - do they put a cap on the amount you put in (either absolute or a percentage) other than the requirement not to go below national minimum wage.
We have a 10% limit and I'm wondering if I could make the case to increase it, as with little in the way of employer contributions on top, this seems low for adequate retirement planning and may be discouraging sensible contribution levels.0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply

Categories
- All Categories
- 348.3K Banking & Borrowing
- 252.1K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 452.4K Spending & Discounts
- 240.9K Work, Benefits & Business
- 617.2K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 175.7K Life & Family
- 254.1K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16K Discuss & Feedback
- 15.1K Coronavirus Support Boards