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Company moved goal posts ?
doris540
Posts: 95 Forumite
Been notified that company is ceasing using Nest and is going over to Aviva. The DC pot will stay with Nest unless I want to move it they will not automatically transfer it. However they are now basing contributions on Basic salary unlike with Nest when bonuses and overtime were all included. I can obviously pay more but their 3 per cent is on basic salary and that is it. For me personally it will make a difference of around £50 ER contribution a month Some however will be far worse off . To me basically the company is off setting the NI insurance increases to the work force pension contributions.
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OK. That sucks, but I doubt there's much that can be done about it. Assuming it doesn't go against your contract of employment it doesn't sound like your employer has done anything that isn't legal.
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Does your employment contract spell out what the employer contributions are? Doe it allow the employer to change them without your consent?
Are they saying that by agreeing to join the Aviva scheme you are also agreeing to the change in employer contributions so there is no breach of contract on their part? Have you actually signed anything?
Are they giving you a Hobson's choice of joining the new scheme with the new contributions or opting out of having any pension?0 -
Yep, it does suck. It happened to me as well. my own auto-enrollment pension scheme used to be on a salary plus bonus and overtime. Eventually, they reduce it to the auto-enrollment minimum above £6,240 strictly. Might be worth confirming if they actually meant 3% of the salary between £6,240 and £50,270. My employer's reason was actually to ensure that the lowest-paid workers in the company can afford to contribute.0
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My understanding is that bonuses and overtime form part of qualifying earnings - and so the employer’s contribution should include these, no matter who the scheme is with.0
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That's the key question here.DRS1 said:Does your employment contract spell out what the employer contributions are? Doe it allow the employer to change them without your consent?
If Aviva becomes the auto enrolment scheme, then employees don't have to 'agree' to join it.DRS1 said:
Are they saying that by agreeing to join the Aviva scheme you are also agreeing to the change in employer contributions so there is no breach of contract on their part? Have you actually signed anything?
The reduction in employer contributions is a contractual matter, so that's what OP needs to check. Simply changing provider doesn't automatically alter that.DRS1 said:
Are they giving you a Hobson's choice of joining the new scheme with the new contributions or opting out of having any pension?
...which they could have accomplished by the simple expedient of keeping employer contributions as they were, but changing the (earnings) basis on which employees were required to contribute. That would still meet the legal requirement provided that minimum contributions based on qualifying earnings were being paid in total.JoeCrystal said:Yep, it does suck. It happened to me as well. my own auto-enrollment pension scheme used to be on a salary plus bonus and overtime. Eventually, they reduce it to the auto-enrollment minimum above £6,240 strictly. Might be worth confirming if they actually meant 3% of the salary between £6,240 and £50,270. My employer's reason was actually to ensure that the lowest-paid workers in the company can afford to contribute.
Googling on your question might have been both quicker and easier, if you're only after simple facts rather than opinions!1 -
I don't get paid overtime but my annual bonus does not get any employer pension contributions. My employer (which is a large multinational) could be breaking the law in this, though I doubt it.Time4T_Accounts said:My understanding is that bonuses and overtime form part of qualifying earnings - and so the employer’s contribution should include these, no matter who the scheme is with.2 -
My bonuses were always treated as outside of pension calculations (also mostly huge multinationals and four different employers) so I don’t believe that’s the case.Time4T_Accounts said:My understanding is that bonuses and overtime form part of qualifying earnings - and so the employer’s contribution should include these, no matter who the scheme is with.2 -
There's considerable flexibility in terms of what an employer can use as the basis for contributions (although in some cases that can impact on the %age contributions to ensure it meets minimum contribution requirements). Good general explanation here: https://www.nestpensions.org.uk/schemeweb/helpcentre/contributions/calculating-contributions/calculate-contributions-using-certification.htmlEl_Torro said:
I don't get paid overtime but my annual bonus does not get any employer pension contributions. My employer (which is a large multinational) could be breaking the law in this, though I doubt it.Time4T_Accounts said:My understanding is that bonuses and overtime form part of qualifying earnings - and so the employer’s contribution should include these, no matter who the scheme is with.Googling on your question might have been both quicker and easier, if you're only after simple facts rather than opinions!1 -
My bonus always said 'non pensionable' in the descriptionI’m a Senior Forum Ambassador and I support the Forum Team on the Pensions, Annuities & Retirement Planning, Loans
& Credit Cards boards. If you need any help on these boards, do let me know. Please note that Ambassadors are not moderators. Any posts you spot in breach of the Forum Rules should be reported via the report button, or by emailing forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com.
All views are my own and not the official line of MoneySavingExpert.0 -
Take a look at paragraphs 36 onwards of this doc from The Pensions Regulator …0
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