DB Pension Increase in Payment - Choices?

BennyBrownBoy
Forumite Posts: 79
Forumite


Hi There,
I have two DB pensions, both of which will come into payment in 2024 at NRA 60.
The smaller of the two offers a choice to members for pension increases in payment as shown in the table below. The pension does not contain any GMP and was for a period from 2010-2014.
I'd be grateful for any thoughts on the pros/cons of the Capped and Uncapped options - will have to make a decision in a few months and am a little uncertain which way to go.
Thanks in advance.


I have two DB pensions, both of which will come into payment in 2024 at NRA 60.
The smaller of the two offers a choice to members for pension increases in payment as shown in the table below. The pension does not contain any GMP and was for a period from 2010-2014.
I'd be grateful for any thoughts on the pros/cons of the Capped and Uncapped options - will have to make a decision in a few months and am a little uncertain which way to go.
Thanks in advance.

0
Comments
-
Are the retirement figures different depending on which option you pick? It may be simialr to a Pension Increase Exchange (PIE) option, where you get a higher starting pension but lower increases (capped versions) in the future. As otherwise there'd be no reason to ever pick the capped versions.
If so, it will depend on how big the differences are .0 -
Tommyjw said:Are the retirement figures different depending on which option you pick? It may be simialr to a Pension Increase Exchange (PIE) option, where you get a higher starting pension but lower increases (capped versions) in the future. As otherwise there'd be no reason to ever pick the capped versions.
If so, it will depend on how big the differences are .0 -
The dfanger of a capped DB pension is that a single year of inflation higher than the cap will result in a permanent loss of real value in your pension, not just in the year when the cap applies. You dont catch up later even if subsequent years are below the cap.
So caps, especially one as low as 3% I think should be avoided if possible. But the answer to your question depends very much on the initial income each option would give. It would also depend on what other income you will have in retirement - a cap in a very small part of your income won't present as much risk as if it was a core component.
0 -
Linton said:The dfanger of a capped DB pension is that a single year of inflation higher than the cap will result in a permanent loss of real value in your pension, not just in the year when the cap applies. You dont catch up later even if subsequent years are below the cap.
So caps, especially one as low as 3% I think should be avoided if possible. But the answer to your question depends very much on the initial income each option would give. It would also depend on what other income you will have in retirement - a cap in a very small part of your income won't present as much risk as if it was a core component.
What I'm struggling to understand - why would the Capped option ever be beneficial in any circumstances?
eg. if RPI is 1%: both options would give an increase of 1%, however if RPI was say 5%, the Uncapped option would always be favourable.
Any thoughts?0 -
BennyBrownBoy said:Linton said:The dfanger of a capped DB pension is that a single year of inflation higher than the cap will result in a permanent loss of real value in your pension, not just in the year when the cap applies. You dont catch up later even if subsequent years are below the cap.
So caps, especially one as low as 3% I think should be avoided if possible. But the answer to your question depends very much on the initial income each option would give. It would also depend on what other income you will have in retirement - a cap in a very small part of your income won't present as much risk as if it was a core component.
What I'm struggling to understand - why would the Capped option ever be beneficial in any circumstances?
eg. if RPI is 1%: both options would give an increase of 1%, however if RPI was say 5%, the Uncapped option would always be favourable.
Any thoughts?
If your (ex) employer is offering either capping or non capping on the same initial pension, all other things being equal, I dont understand it either. I suggest you get the pension people to explain.0 -
BennyBrownBoy said:Linton said:The dfanger of a capped DB pension is that a single year of inflation higher than the cap will result in a permanent loss of real value in your pension, not just in the year when the cap applies. You dont catch up later even if subsequent years are below the cap.
So caps, especially one as low as 3% I think should be avoided if possible. But the answer to your question depends very much on the initial income each option would give. It would also depend on what other income you will have in retirement - a cap in a very small part of your income won't present as much risk as if it was a core component.
What I'm struggling to understand - why would the Capped option ever be beneficial in any circumstances?
eg. if RPI is 1%: both options would give an increase of 1%, however if RPI was say 5%, the Uncapped option would always be favourable.
Any thoughts?
If you're sure that the starting pension is the same for both, then perhaps you get a lower lump sum for the uncapped option, or a lower survivor's pension, etc?
Could you perhaps contact them to ask the question of apart from the pension increase what difference there will be to your retirement benefits.0 -
I'm not surprised you are confused - I would suggest you read all the details again to make sure that you haven't missed any differences, and if not ask them to clarify if there are any other implications of choosing uncapped. If not, then you are correct I don't know why they are even asking the question.0
-
BennyBrownBoy said:Hi There,
I have two DB pensions, both of which will come into payment in 2024 at NRA 60.
The smaller of the two offers a choice to members for pension increases in payment as shown in the table below. The pension does not contain any GMP and was for a period from 2010-2014.
I'd be grateful for any thoughts on the pros/cons of the Capped and Uncapped options - will have to make a decision in a few months and am a little uncertain which way to go.
Thanks in advance.Googling on your question might have been both quicker and easier, if you're only after simple facts rather than opinions!0 -
Thanks everyone - I plan on writing to the provider today and will update the thread when I receive a response.
May take a little while - they are never the quickest to respond...1 -
It could be the wording is bad and it refers to two different sets of people, those with capped option and those without, otherwise I also fail to see the point.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 338.9K Banking & Borrowing
- 248.7K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 447.6K Spending & Discounts
- 230.8K Work, Benefits & Business
- 600.9K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 171.1K Life & Family
- 244K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 15.9K Discuss & Feedback
- 15.1K Coronavirus Support Boards