What would you do?
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What would you do?
Shout about it online, obvs.
:smug:
How close to retirement are you ?
Sent from my ONEPLUS 5
Not working now, at 54.
What does CETV mean?
Left mine in the final salary scheme
Happy with the known quantity so to speak
Thought about it for 5 Mins though
To be serious for a minute. My FSPS would only survive me by my spouse, being 50% of my entitlement for her lifetime. After that, nothing to my two children. I am looking for better future value than that. £1.3m goes a long way, especially when I have no need of the income for 5/6 years.
Not quite that much but I transferred mine.
You will know it’s over the LTA but a nice problem to have!
Really depends on the estimated regular payments. But... Personally, I'd take the money and possibly into a SIPP (take the max tax free lump some) and then buy some rental property and a few other assets classes and manage my investments personally.
It's a tough choice. Some of the benefits of "taking" the cash already mentioned.
Ultimately it's a question of your attitude to risk and your other resources/income streams.
Have you done the getting financial advice bit? How long is your quote valid for?
I have an IFA, whom I have known for a good while, on the case. To add to the mix, my wife has a similar pension entitlement at c. £600k in CETV terms. Ultimate goal is to have both children in their own wholly-owned properties at year end. Then, job done.
We have quotes open for three months.
Hire some bodyguards - we know where you live and how much you have...
I thought CETV was a TV station - like a premiership one - started thinking Chelsea TV, then Charlton...
Just as an aside, everyone always says take the tax free cash (as mentioned on here as well). Why?
If you need it then yes take it. However more and more people are using other assets to use money first nowadays (ISA's et al) because whilst its still in your pension, its outside your estate for IHT purposes (changes at 75) so I would run through things with your FA to work out where's best to utilise funds from. Also depends whether there's an IHT issue in the first place, which I would assume there is in this case. More people are using pensions for IHT planning now than ever before, which is probably ones of the reasons why the lifetime allowance has been reduced so it's capped.
Just as an aside, everyone always says take the tax free cash (as mentioned on here as well). Why?
If you need it then yes take it. However more and more people are using other assets to use money first nowadays (ISA's et al) because whilst its still in your pension, its outside your estate for IHT purposes (changes at 75) so I would run through things with your FA to work out where's best to utilise funds from. Also depends whether there's an IHT issue in the first place, which I would assume there is in this case. More people are using pensions for IHT planning now than ever before, which is probably ones of the reasons why the lifetime allowance has been reduced so it's capped.
What is the lifetime allowance these days? I know that I'm nowhere near it!
Would need more information before any hope of a serious reply (assuming you were after one).
How much pension would you be giving up in your DB scheme? What other assets (including other pensions) do you have? What other sources of income do you have (are you still working or retired)? And so on.
I know you say that your DB pension dies with you (and your wife) but is that a phrase you want to be reflecting on with regret when you're dancing the funky chicken on your 75th wedding anniversary?
LTA is £1.0M at the moment, going up roughly in line with inflation to £1.03M in April, and expected to continue to rise in inflation in future years.
That's another factor for the OP - DB pensions are treated more generously for LTA purposes than DC pensions. That £1.3M DC pot would incur a tax charge on the excess over the LTA. I would guess the DB pension it reflects is probably less than £50k pa which would be valued at less than £1M so wouldn't incur a tax charge.
Can you please adopt me...
Another reason to take the Tax free part now is to reduce you're tax liability on LTA. Although you would then pay tax on what you earned if its invested
outside you're pension pot depending on how you do it.
Been going through this for last few months and been presented with about 15 different scenarios each time about 15 pages long, started to get number blindness.
How? Your tax liability is on everything over £1m, the max tax free cash you can take is £250000 so in the OP’s case there is a potential tax liability on £300000 when it is crystallised.
My intention is to take the tax free cash on a monthly basis over a number of years.
yep but he can still take £250k tax free and yes he has an extra tax liability but still better off overall. I do accept that he may be better taking it and depending how it’s invested have less tax to pay but there aren’t many places he could get tax free growth (Isas but only investing £20k) a year.
By taking it gradually as “income” I can mitigate income tax. So say I need £36k pa to live- take £12k as income and fund the other £24 k from TFC and therefore no tax to pay and existing money grows (or not!) tax free.
I accept everyone’s circumstances are different but I’m looking at the latter option as LTA is likely to increase each year, tax isn’t payable until I crystallise in excess of £1m (or death or age 75) and the market will go down at some stage (so potentially could crystallise all the fund and pay no LTA.
Choice, choices and more choices:grief:
Yes it does depend on you’re circumstances and there are lots of ways to look at it but I would guess with £1.3m then 36k pa probably won’t be that interesting. If you are looking to have an income of say 65k you can limit what you take as drawdown to 45k to keep within 20% tax band and take the additional 20k from the tax free lumpsum you have already taken and still reduce your liability on LTA.
OP is also lucky that his wife also has decent CETV as can similarly try and keep within 20% tax band,
it makes quite a difference if while employed you were paying higher rate tax.
Is your penis really so tiny that you need to big yourself up to strangers on an internet forum about how rich you are. What a sad git.
Move to a country where they don’t tax foreign pensions income....