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Removal of 40% Tax relief
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RD42
Posts: 76 Forumite

Hi All,
Is anyone considering paying in larger sums than normal into their pension to make the most of 40% tax relief, assuming that it may be reduced / abolished in the next budget?
Thanks!
Is anyone considering paying in larger sums than normal into their pension to make the most of 40% tax relief, assuming that it may be reduced / abolished in the next budget?
Thanks!
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Comments
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Hi All,
Is anyone considering paying in larger sums than normal into their pension to make the most of 40% tax relief, assuming that it may be reduced / abolished in the next budget?
Thanks!
This question has come up every year since 40% tax relief was available.
The answer is generally no.0 -
If you have the money and the allowance available, I see no reason not to make hay while the sun shines.
That said, the Budget will be in November and any cut to pension tax relief will almost with 100% certainty take effect in April 2018, so you will lose nothing by waiting to see what the Budget actually says.0 -
Thanks - immediate effect or not was my biggest concern.0
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How would this work with DB and Sal Sac?
I would have thought 40k to 30k would be more likely. This would be a nightmare for me and may require me to completely rejig my income, working hours and retirement date requiring 2 years more workI think....0 -
bowlhead99 wrote: »This question has come up every year since 40% tax relief was available.
The answer is generally no.0 -
Is anyone considering paying in larger sums than normal into their pension to make the most of 40% tax relief,
I decided that 10 years ago (to drop my salary below the 40% band.) Still doing it.assuming that it may be reduced / abolished in the next budget?
That wasn't the reason I did it though.Conjugating the verb 'to be":
-o I am humble -o You are attention seeking -o She is Nadine Dorries0 -
It'll happen some day, a reduction in higher rate relief. Whether it's wise to fill a pension under the prospect of a Corbyn government is anyone's guess. If he were to go full Communist Bulgaria he'd steal all pension pots anyway.Free the dunston one next time too.0
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Who knows but it's funny how you don't appreciate something until someone threatens to take it away!
When it was last mooted it made me realise that I wasn't taking enough advantage of the perk so have stopped overpaying the mortgage (we have a forever house and were aiming to be repaid at 40) and started ploughing money into the pension. This year I expect to use around £35k of the allowance with a small salary sacrifice boost and will be a basic rate taxpayer for the first time this decade.
To be honest I don't think the current system is fair and it gives insufficient incentive for middle earners to save so I would welcome a rebalance to a flat rate of tax advantage regardless of income.
I am hoping to reduce my responsibilities over time so it might even work in my favour in future when my earnings are lower.
Alex0 -
I pay in as much as I can spare on the assumption that the days of salary sacrifice are probably numbered - not necessarily in this budget, but when the full economic horror of Brexit hits, or next time Labor get in, it's an obvious low hanging fruit for a chancellor who needs a lot of money.
If it turns out that I'm wrong then I'll end up with loads of money in my pension and I guess I'll just have to retire early. Bummer!0
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