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Salary Sacrifice Query

Snapdragon
Posts: 351 Forumite


Am hoping someone can have a look over my thinking and confirm whether I'm on the right track or have made any obvious mistakes.
Since the beginning of this tax year I've been salary sacrificing into my pension 45% (employer adds another 5% which is their max contribution). I also sacrificed my annual bonus in May.
I'm thinking of increasing my sacrifice to 100% for the rest of the tax year and living off cash in my Santander account. I don't think the company has any upper sacrifice level restriction.
1) I'm aware there is a "have to earn at least minimum wage" requirement but don't know how exactly that works. I am wondering since I've earned at least that, in the first 7 months, can I now sacrifice everything?
2) I'm also aware of the £40,000 a year limit to pension contributions, which I'll exceed this year if I increase to 100% sacrifice.
I'm playing catch up having only put about £40,000 into pension in total over the last 3 years, so believe I have plenty of carry forward available. Do I have to do anything, like notify anyone about using the carry forward, is it automatic?
3) Does the 100% sacrifice mean no further tax and national insurance and will I have in fact paid too much tax given payroll divide the personal allowance across monthly payslips?
4) The other rule about you can only pay in the amount you earn in a year. Is it therefore the Gross Pensionable figure shown on my payslip that I can put in?
That presumably, by the end of the year would equate to my normal annual salary figure? So since to date I've only been putting in 45% I'd be well within the gross pensionable figure, in regard contributions?
I have separate emergency fund which I wouldn't be dipping into to support this. So does this strategy make sense?
Is it the most efficient way, given I want to avoid higher rates of tax and want to get as much as possible into my pension, to give it a boost?
Would appreciate any thoughts on this, thanks.
Since the beginning of this tax year I've been salary sacrificing into my pension 45% (employer adds another 5% which is their max contribution). I also sacrificed my annual bonus in May.
I'm thinking of increasing my sacrifice to 100% for the rest of the tax year and living off cash in my Santander account. I don't think the company has any upper sacrifice level restriction.
1) I'm aware there is a "have to earn at least minimum wage" requirement but don't know how exactly that works. I am wondering since I've earned at least that, in the first 7 months, can I now sacrifice everything?
2) I'm also aware of the £40,000 a year limit to pension contributions, which I'll exceed this year if I increase to 100% sacrifice.
I'm playing catch up having only put about £40,000 into pension in total over the last 3 years, so believe I have plenty of carry forward available. Do I have to do anything, like notify anyone about using the carry forward, is it automatic?
3) Does the 100% sacrifice mean no further tax and national insurance and will I have in fact paid too much tax given payroll divide the personal allowance across monthly payslips?
4) The other rule about you can only pay in the amount you earn in a year. Is it therefore the Gross Pensionable figure shown on my payslip that I can put in?
That presumably, by the end of the year would equate to my normal annual salary figure? So since to date I've only been putting in 45% I'd be well within the gross pensionable figure, in regard contributions?
I have separate emergency fund which I wouldn't be dipping into to support this. So does this strategy make sense?
Is it the most efficient way, given I want to avoid higher rates of tax and want to get as much as possible into my pension, to give it a boost?
Would appreciate any thoughts on this, thanks.
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Comments
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Snapdragon wrote: »Am hoping someone can have a look over my thinking and confirm whether I'm on the right track or have made any obvious mistakes.
Since the beginning of this tax year I've been salary sacrificing into my pension 45% (employer adds another 5% which is their max contribution). I also sacrificed my annual bonus in May.
I'm thinking of increasing my sacrifice to 100% for the rest of the tax year and living off cash in my Santander account. I don't think the company has any upper sacrifice level restriction.
1) I'm aware there is a "have to earn at least minimum wage" requirement but don't know how exactly that works. I am wondering since I've earned at least that, in the first 7 months, can I now sacrifice everything?2) I'm also aware of the £40,000 a year limit to pension contributions, which I'll exceed this year if I increase to 100% sacrifice.
I'm playing catch up having only put about £40,000 into pension in total over the last 3 years, so believe I have plenty of carry forward available. Do I have to do anything, like notify anyone about using the carry forward, is it automatic?.
3) Does the 100% sacrifice mean no further tax and national insurance and will I have in fact paid too much tax given payroll divide the personal allowance across monthly payslips?
4) The other rule about you can only pay in the amount you earn in a year. Is it therefore the Gross Pensionable figure shown on my payslip that I can put in?
That presumably, by the end of the year would equate to my normal annual salary figure? So since to date I've only been putting in 45% I'd be well within the gross pensionable figure, in regard contributions?I have separate emergency fund which I wouldn't be dipping into to support this. So does this strategy make sense?
Is it the most efficient way, given I want to avoid higher rates of tax and want to get as much as possible into my pension, to give it a boost?
Since your SS doesnt count against your earnings you could make additional personal pension contributions, perhaps into a SIPP, and get the tax rebate despite not paying tax. This assumes the £40K total limit can be overcome with carry forward of the allowance.0 -
Although you can use the last two years unused annual allowance to go over the £40K in this year , as far as I know you still can not go above what your actual taxable earnings are this year .0
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You can only sacrifice down to National Minimum Wage (or whatever they're calling it this week.)
At £7.83, and assuming 37.5 hrs per week over 52 weeks, that's £15,268.50 this tax year (2019/20 it will work out to £16,009.50)
So your gross wage (after sacrifice) should be at least this at the end of the tax year. That will be the figure you enter into your self assessment.
Incidnetally, the Lower Earnings Limit (LEL, the minimum you're required to earn to get NI credits) is £116/w, which works out to £6,032. Since that's above the NMW, this shouldn't concern you.
WRT carry-forward, you need to keep your own records to make sure you don't breech limits there, but beyond sticking your contributions on your self assessment, you need not do anything more to inform HMRC.
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What you could do with that remaining £15K is put 80% of it into a pension fund after tax, and get the 20% rebate (even though £11,850 wouldn't have had income tax deducted to begin with.)Conjugating the verb 'to be":
-o I am humble -o You are attention seeking -o She is Nadine Dorries0 -
Snapdragon wrote: »Am hoping someone can have a look over my thinking and confirm whether I'm on the right track or have made any obvious mistakes.
Since the beginning of this tax year I've been salary sacrificing into my pension 45% (employer adds another 5% which is their max contribution). I also sacrificed my annual bonus in May.
I'm thinking of increasing my sacrifice to 100% for the rest of the tax year and living off cash in my Santander account. I don't think the company has any upper sacrifice level restriction.
1) I'm aware there is a "have to earn at least minimum wage" requirement but don't know how exactly that works. I am wondering since I've earned at least that, in the first 7 months, can I now sacrifice everything?2) I'm also aware of the £40,000 a year limit to pension contributions, which I'll exceed this year if I increase to 100% sacrifice.I'm playing catch up having only put about £40,000 into pension in total over the last 3 years, so believe I have plenty of carry forward available. Do I have to do anything, like notify anyone about using the carry forward, is it automatic?3) Does the 100% sacrifice mean no further tax and national insurance and will I have in fact paid too much tax given payroll divide the personal allowance across monthly payslips?4) The other rule about you can only pay in the amount you earn in a year. Is it therefore the Gross Pensionable figure shown on my payslip that I can put in?0 -
Thanks LintonYou may need to check that you haven't put yourself below the NI limit, if you need the NI years for your State Pension.
I think when I checked state pension it said I had 39 years already so I'd guess I'm alright, but best to ensure this year counts as well so need to find out how much would be minimum I'd need to pay.
Having googled I found "For 2018-19, the National Insurance threshold is £8,424 a year (up from £8,164 in 2017-18). If your earnings are below the earnings threshold, you pay no National Insurance contributions."
So if I understand that statement correctly having earned more than £8424 (after the 45% sacrifice) and paid £2000+ in NI so far this year, then this year will count.0 -
Paul_Herring wrote: »You can only sacrifice down to National Minimum Wage (or whatever they're calling it this week.)
At £7.83, and assuming 37.5 hrs per week over 52 weeks, that's £15,268.50 this tax year (2019/20 it will work out to £16,009.50)
So your gross wage (after sacrifice) should be at least this at the end of the tax year.
That's what I meant by I've already earned the minimum wage for this year. Since to-date I've only been sacrificing 45%, my gross to-date is considerably more than £15268.50, which is why I was guessing I didn't need to be paid anymore and everything could be sacrificed to the pension.
However the feedback suggests this isn't correct. I may still need to earn a minimum level every month?0 -
Snapdragon wrote: »
However the feedback suggests this isn't correct. I may still need to earn a minimum level every month?
An employer is duty bound to ensure that the NMW is maintained.0 -
I think NMW is on a pay period basis otherwise it could be abused.
For example Job 1 - employer pays you £3k a month for 6 months
Job 2, with same employer, - pays you £100 a month for 6 months
You will have earned above NMW over 12 month period but been paid well below NMW for last 6 months of the year.0 -
Thrugelmir wrote: »An employer is duty bound to ensure that the NMW is maintained.
What is taken into account when calculating NMW?
I started thinking of doing the additional salary sacrifice because I'm due a bonus next month which can't be sacrificed and I didn't want to lose a big chunk of it to tax, hence planned to take the bonus instead of salary. Will that meet the NMW criteria?
I also get a monthly paid allowance (which isn't sacrificed), is that included in the total for NMW calculation?
So minimum £15,268.50 / 12 months = £1,272.37 still needed every month for the rest of the year?
Can that be in the form of the allowance and a bit of salary? Could I sacrifice to a % that leaves enough salary plus allowance to total about £1300 pretax/NI to meet the criteria?
So confused.0 -
which can't be sacrificed
What reason has been given?Conjugating the verb 'to be":
-o I am humble -o You are attention seeking -o She is Nadine Dorries0
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