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Guide discussion: Voluntary national insurance contributions

MSE_Clare
Posts: 36 MSE Staff

This is the place to discuss our new guide on voluntary national insurance contributions.
We'd love to hear your thoughts, personal experiences, and general feedback.
If you haven’t already, join the forum to reply. If you aren’t sure how it all works, read our New to Forum? Intro Guide.'
We'd love to hear your thoughts, personal experiences, and general feedback.
If you haven’t already, join the forum to reply. If you aren’t sure how it all works, read our New to Forum? Intro Guide.'
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Comments
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Where can we find this guide ?A link to it would be helpful .....0
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My experience is that I have had to write to PT Operations North East England, HM Revenue and Customs BX9 1AN to tell them which years I intended to pay and they would write back with the 18 digit payment reference number to make an online payment.
https://www.gov.uk/pay-voluntary-class-3-national-insurance/bank-details
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MSE_Clare said:This is the place to discuss our new guide on voluntary national insurance contributions.
We'd love to hear your thoughts, personal experiences, and general feedback.
If you haven’t already, join the forum to reply. If you aren’t sure how it all works, read our New to Forum? Intro Guide.'What I’d like to see added is;
1. It should be highlighted that even having 35 years will not necessarily give you a full new state pension. The 35 years really only applies to someone who has not contributed to the previous system at all. For most of us we’re in a hybrid situation and may need more or less than the 35 years.2. In the section where you note that anyone who was contracted out and had 30 years would be unlikely to benefit, it should be mentioned that it is still possible but only contributions made from April 2016 onwards will make a difference.5 -
jem16 said:2. In the section where you note that anyone who was contracted out and had 30 years would be unlikely to benefit, it should be mentioned that it is still possible but only contributions made from April 2016 onwards will make a difference.
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You lost me by the end of the first paragraph in the guide. The last clause is simply not true. Given the amount of discussion on this board about the issue of the number of years, and the number of subscribers who arrive with the wrong info, there's absolutely no excuse for a guide on this site to get it wrong. IMHOEdit - to add: And the last 'Important' paragraph is also wrong, as others have pointed out.
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molerat said:jem16 said:2. In the section where you note that anyone who was contracted out and had 30 years would be unlikely to benefit, it should be mentioned that it is still possible but only contributions made from April 2016 onwards will make a difference.0
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I think that the following paragraph at the start of the guide should make it clear that even if you are eligible to plug NI gaps before 2016 back to 2006, plugging these gaps still might not increase your State Pension,
"To make it easier to get the full state pension there are transitional arrangements in place for those on this 'new' system. These mean people reaching state pension age on or after 6 April 2016 can pay to plug gaps in their NI record dating all the way back to 2006. But you need to act quickly if you want to do this, as this transitional arrangement ends on 5 April 2023, after which you'll only be able to plug gaps going back six years."
The following "Important Message" doesn't seem to be correct at all as I had 40 full years Ni contributions up to 2016, had been contracted out, but am still making voluntary payments which is increasing my forecast.
"Important. If you were 'contracted out' of the additional state pension and already had 30 NI years by April 2016, topping up isn't likely to help
This is because your 30 NI years already qualifies you for the maximum 'starting amount' of state pension and paying for extra NI years won't boost how much you get. Yet, being 'contracted out' usually means you were contributing to another pension, with the idea that this would supplement your state pension."1 -
Audaxer said:
The following "Important Message" doesn't seem to be correct at all as I had 40 full years Ni contributions up to 2016, had been contracted out, but am still making voluntary payments which is increasing my forecast.
"Important. If you were 'contracted out' of the additional state pension and already had 30 NI years by April 2016, topping up isn't likely to help
This is because your 30 NI years already qualifies you for the maximum 'starting amount' of state pension and paying for extra NI years won't boost how much you get. Yet, being 'contracted out' usually means you were contributing to another pension, with the idea that this would supplement your state pension."3 -
Audaxer said:The following "Important Message" doesn't seem to be correct at all as I had 40 full years Ni contributions up to 2016, had been contracted out, but am still making voluntary payments which is increasing my forecast.
"Important. If you were 'contracted out' of the additional state pension and already had 30 NI years by April 2016, topping up isn't likely to help
This is because your 30 NI years already qualifies you for the maximum 'starting amount' of state pension and paying for extra NI years won't boost how much you get. Yet, being 'contracted out' usually means you were contributing to another pension, with the idea that this would supplement your state pension."They are referring to topping up pre 2016 years, still incorrect thoughAs I said in my earlier post it all depends on the amount of COPE and S2P0 -
molerat said:Audaxer said:The following "Important Message" doesn't seem to be correct at all as I had 40 full years Ni contributions up to 2016, had been contracted out, but am still making voluntary payments which is increasing my forecast.
"Important. If you were 'contracted out' of the additional state pension and already had 30 NI years by April 2016, topping up isn't likely to help
This is because your 30 NI years already qualifies you for the maximum 'starting amount' of state pension and paying for extra NI years won't boost how much you get. Yet, being 'contracted out' usually means you were contributing to another pension, with the idea that this would supplement your state pension."They are referring to topping up pre 2016 years, still incorrect thoughAs I said in my earlier post it all depends on the amount of COPE and S2P0
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