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Do you pay into a pension?

antonia1
Posts: 596 Forumite

I have to make a decision and would like some help. If I pause paying into my pension scheme I will move my debt free date from August 2014 to June 2014. But my pension scheme is pretty good, and I'm nervous about stopping paying as it doesn't make a huge difference. I also have no option of making up the difference at a later date.
I'm still in my 20s (just) and so won't be needing my pension any time soon.
So, do you pay into a pension, or do you think a pension is more like a savings thing and should be paid when you are debt free?
I'm still in my 20s (just) and so won't be needing my pension any time soon.
So, do you pay into a pension, or do you think a pension is more like a savings thing and should be paid when you are debt free?
:A If saving money is wrong, I don't want to be right. William Shatner
CC1 [STRIKE] £9400 [/STRIKE] £9300
CC2 [STRIKE] £800 [/STRIKE] £750
OD [STRIKE] £1350 [/STRIKE] £1150
CC1 [STRIKE] £9400 [/STRIKE] £9300
CC2 [STRIKE] £800 [/STRIKE] £750
OD [STRIKE] £1350 [/STRIKE] £1150
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Comments
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I pay into two pensions, my teaching pension and my pension from my previous job, we aren't high earners at all, but it would take a hell of a lot for me to pause my pension contributions. I personally would rather be worse off now and more financially secure in my old age.0
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Well I'm late 30s and have no pension �� it worries me a lot but I just never seem to be able to afford to join. I don't know where to start to resolve this problem.0
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I kept up my pension contributions. The compounding effect over time does make it difficult to make up what you would dhave earned, even if you contribute more later. I could have knocked several months off my debt free date if I'd paused but that wasn't enough to be worth it in my eyes.MFW 2024 £27500/7500 Mortgage £129,500 Jan 22 Final payment June 38 Now £68489.08 FP May 36 Emergency Fund £20,000 100% Added to ISA 24 £8,060 Save 12k in 24 #31 £20,034.76/20,000 Debt Free 31.07.140
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I have to make a decision and would like some help. If I pause paying into my pension scheme I will move my debt free date from August 2014 to June 2014. But my pension scheme is pretty good, and I'm nervous about stopping paying as it doesn't make a huge difference. I also have no option of making up the difference at a later date.
I'm still in my 20s (just) and so won't be needing my pension any time soon.
So, do you pay into a pension, or do you think a pension is more like a savings thing and should be paid when you are debt free?
Personally I wouldn't stop paying into a pension particularly if it's a workplace one.0 -
I know exactly what you mean as I remember asking this question to myself 'many' years ago in that I saw it as a loss of a lot of money (although I wasn't in debt then).
I now pay into a workplace pension and have done so for the past 9.5 years and I am pleased to say I am happy about this given the current climate and no doubt working until I am 70!! :eek:
It is taken at source so I don't see it go and allow for my income as it says on the bottom right of the payslip! As others have also mentioned its important for the long term as once you stop paying that's it...you would then need to make up the difference or get less overall! I appreciate this is really hard to think of when you are young but trust me...time flies!!
My husband has added - he sees people on a daily basis (with his job - ambulance service) and adds those that have an employment pension have a better well being than those that do not.:eek: 07/14 - LBM.....£38,151k joint debt :eek: now £32,417k
Loan 1 - £20k - Now £18400, Loan 2 - £12k - Now £9470, CC1 - £795 - Now £720, CC2 - £3k - Now £2778, CC3 £361 - Now £209, CC4 - £100 - Now £70.99. DH OD - £1895 - Now £770
1% challenge 08/14 #337; £2 challenge 01/15 #199;0 -
I have to make a decision and would like some help. If I pause paying into my pension scheme I will move my debt free date from August 2014 to June 2014. But my pension scheme is pretty good, and I'm nervous about stopping paying as it doesn't make a huge difference. I also have no option of making up the difference at a later date.
I'm still in my 20s (just) and so won't be needing my pension any time soon.
So, do you pay into a pension, or do you think a pension is more like a savings thing and should be paid when you are debt free?
The sensible option is to keep paying your pension, and if your Debt Free Day is a bit later, who cares? You are in your 20's so plenty of time to pay back debts.0 -
I am still paying into my work pension and my advise would be to do the same. If you paused paying in you would forego your employers contributions, and like has already been mentioned you miss out on the compounding effect of having your money in there for longer.LBM: Dec 2012 - Debt £38,180/ Now £0.
DFD - 17/04/2016
Gambling: The sure way of getting nothing from something.
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I believe you can either have it Hard then Easy - pay in now, and have money in retirement, or Easy then Hard spend the money now and live in poverty in retirement.ISA £1675
MiniMoohound savings £3685.86 :T Plus £3800 CTF
'MrMoneyMuststache' my new hero, Martin Lewis my long time hero
Poacher turned Gamekeeper
Roadkill rebel No 52 Aug £1.34p Sept 24p Oct 5p Nov 5p Sealed pot Challenge No 403 £176.66(2014) :staradmin NOV NST No 200 -
My worry for stopping pension for something like this is that a) you might not end up using all the cash for debt and b) you may not ever begin paying into pension again. Obviously this depends on the person but I view it in the same area as consolidation loans. Even if the person has every good intention, life sometimes has other plans for your money when its available!0
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For the sake of 2 months, I really, really wouldnt bother to stop paying. Just keep your pension going.
I pay into a Work based pension. It stopped when I left my old job (i was paying in 1%, my employer paid in 5%!) and I havent been making any payments to it (since December 2012). I have just been enrolled into my works pension (they one they've started) and I pay in 1% and they pay in 1%. I will be adding my existing pension to my current one shortly so that I should hopefully get a decent return. I started the original one in my mid to late 20's and I am now approaching mid 30's. It's only worth around £7k I think at the moment, but I am looking at other ways to have a nest egg later on in life once I am debt free.As at End of June 2014
Credit Cards - HSBC - £9422
Loans - NRAM £7500 & £128480
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