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Month: April 2023

Pension changes make retirement saving more attractive

Pension changes make retirement saving more attractive

Pensions got a major overhaul in the Chancellor’s Budget announcements, with an increase in the amount you can put into your pension each year and an effective removal of the limit that your pension can reach before facing significant penalties of as much as 55%.

Rise in Annual Allowances

From April, the Annual Allowance – the amount you can put into your pension each year and receive tax relief, providing you have paid enough in tax in a year to warrant it, as the taxman will not give you more in relief than you have paid – will rise from £40,000 to £60,000.

There is also a rise in the Money Purchase Annual Allowance, which is the amount you can pay into a money purchase pension each year once you have vested part of it. This rises from £4,000 to £10,000 for the 2023/24 tax year – taking it back to its previous level.

The Tapered Annual Allowance is also going up from £4,000 back to its original level of £10,000. This taper kicked in at an ‘adjusted income’ level of £240,000, but this also rises to £260,000 for the 2023/24 tax year.

Lifetime Allowance effectively removed from April 2023

One of the most eye-catching measures in the Budget was the effective removal of the Lifetime Allowance, which limited the amount a pension fund could grow to £1,0731,000 before charges of up to 55% were applied on the additional amounts unless someone had a ‘protected pension’.

From April 6, these penalties will no longer apply, meaning there is no longer a penalty for passing this limit. This renders the Lifetime Allowance irrelevant as there will not be a penalty for breaching it. But it will take separate legislation to remove the Lifetime Allowance itself completely.

This is something that will be valuable particularly for some senior NHS doctors, as there has been a rising trend in them leaving the profession through early retirement, in part at least to prevent their pension going over the Lifetime Allowance.

Limit on the tax-free lump sum

However, there is a cap on the amount that someone can take from their pension as a 25% tax-free lump sum, thanks to the removal of the penalties being removed for breaching the Lifetime Allowance.

From April 6, you will only be able to take a maximum of £268,275 tax-free from your pension, which is the same as the maximum you could take under the Lifetime Allowance.

These measures combined are expected to cost the Treasury around £4 billion over the next five years.

We can help you

These pension changes are wide ranging and could significantly change your retirement planning, so if you want to know more about how you can make the most of these changes, then please get in touch and we will be happy to help.

April 24, 2023

Childcare benefits with a sting in the tail for high earners

Childcare benefits with a sting in the tail for high earners

Up to 30 hours of free childcare per week will become available for any child older than nine months from 2024, when there is a staggered introduction starting at 15 hours in April 2024, rising to 30 hours in September 2025. This will be a welcome boost for parents struggling to manage what for some is a monthly bill higher than their mortgage. But there is a sting in the tail for higher earners.

However, it may not even be as beneficial as it first seems even for those on more nominal salaries as each local authority calculates the hourly funding rate it will allocate in a different way. So, the Government’s hourly funding rate for children aged two at £5.83, which could save parents an average of £6,646 per year on childcare, could be less depending on where you live in the country, creating something of a postcode lottery for this benefit. Parents would need to make up any shortfall for nursery care from their own pocket.

Also, free childcare only runs during term-time, so any additional childcare would need to be paid for directly themselves. But there is an additional £2,000 of tax-free childcare offered to those who are eligible.

The scheme extension means childcare for two children

The scheme has been extended to allow two children of pre-school age to get access to free childcare under the Budget announcements, which in London could mean an annual saving of around £23,300 for parents under the 30-hours of free care scheme when it finally kicks in.

Add in the additional £2,000 of tax-free care per child and the amount saved rises to £27,300 – but there is a precipitous drop once income reaches £100,000 per year. At this point, all of these benefits are lost, and you would have to pay all of the childcare from your own pocket.

To achieve this and be no worse off, it would mean you need to earn £156,279 before you achieved the same disposable income you had while earning up to £100,000 and benefitting from these childcare schemes in London.

For the rest of England, the average is slightly lower – with the childcare support worth £21,718 and the threshold to achieve the same disposable income once breaching the £100,000 earnings limit also being slightly lower at £146,114. But it is still a real hit to the pocket. It means parents are actually worse off if they are earning between £100,000 and £156,000 according to data from AJ Bell.

Can I do anything about this?

For any parent facing this cliff-edge change in circumstances, there is some good news. The £100,000 threshold is your income minus any pension contributions you make, so it would be wise to consider moving any additional income into your pension to take you back under the £100,000 income threshold.

This has been made significantly easier and more attractive once the penalties for breaching the Lifetime Allowance have been removed, and the other annual allowances are also increased.

Let us help you

If you are likely to find yourself in the position where your earnings will exceed £100,000 and you will benefit from the additional free childcare, then please get in touch and we will help you to maximise the benefits you can receive.

April 17, 2023

Highest rate of tax will be paid by more people after the top threshold is reduced in the Budget

Highest rate of tax will be paid by more people after the top threshold is reduced in the Budget

Higher earners have been dealt a blow after the Chancellor changed the level at which the 45% additional rate of tax applies from £150,000 to £125,140.

The move takes effect in the 2023/24 tax year and brings the threshold in line with the point at which the personal allowance, which is frozen at £12,570 for 2023/24, is removed entirely. For those earning more than £100,000 a year, the personal allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 earned above this limit.

More than £1,000 due in extra tax

The measure will cost an extra £1,243 a year in tax, said Steven Cameron, pensions director at Aegon, while Kwasi Kwarteng’s short-lived mini-Budget would have removed this additional rate completely.

However, once again it may make it more appealing for higher earners to put money into their pension schemes. Mr Cameron said: “While the freeze on thresholds for basic and higher rate income tax will create more tax take ‘by stealth’, there’s nothing stealthy about the cut in the additional rate threshold which rather than being frozen is being reduced from £150,000 to £125,140.

“But in current conditions, it’s not surprising that those who can afford to shoulder a greater part of the burden of tax increases are being asked to do so.

“Note that the existing gradual phasing out of the personal allowance once individuals earn over £100,000 means earnings between £100,000 and £125,140 are already effectively taxed at 60%. It now means thereafter, the marginal rate will be 45%.

“Together, these higher rates of income tax make paying personal contributions to pensions, which get relief at full marginal rate, particularly appealing.”

We can help you meet your obligations

If this change will affect you, then please get in touch and we will help you to maximise your tax life and work with you to perfect your pension planning.

April 10, 2023

Budget round-up – what’s changed and how it might affect you

Budget round-up – what’s changed and how it might affect you

The latest Budget on March 15 was a mix of wins and losses for people and companies around the country, with some considerable changes for pensions and the highest rate taxpayers thrown in.

The personal allowances for the 2023/24 tax year were largely frozen once again, which creates what is known as ‘fiscal drag’ where more people are brought into higher tax brackets as a result when they receive pay rises. The one exception was the very highest rate of income tax at 45%, where the amount earned before hitting this level was reduced from £150,000 to £125,140 from April 6.

Help with energy bills extended

The Chancellor extended the Energy Price Guarantee to help keep households sheltered from some of the worst of the energy price rises we have seen in recent months. The guarantee has been kept at £2,500 and extended through April, May and June – taking us to the warmer summer months.

Despite energy prices being around 50% of the level forecast back in October, this measure is still worth around £160 to the typical household. The £2,500 cap is not the maximum an energy bill will hit, but it does cap the amount a typical energy bill will reach.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said: “We know people are worried about their bills rising in April, so to give people some peace of mind, we’re keeping the Energy Price Guarantee at its current level until the summer when gas prices are expected to fall.

“Continuing to hold down energy bills is part of our plan to help hardworking families with the cost of living and halve inflation this year.”

As Rishi Sunak said, the move has the double benefit of helping to drive down inflation, which was still in double figures in the 12 months to February at 10.4%, slightly up on the 10.1% we saw over the equivalent period in January. Economists had expected inflation to fall in February, so it came as something of a shock.

ISA Allowance frozen for 2023/24 but SEIS investment access rises

The annual Individual Savings Account (ISA) allowance was also frozen again for the 2023/24 tax year, leaving it at £20,000 for each person.

However, the amount that companies can access, and use, of the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS) is rising. The company investment limit will go from £150,000 to £250,000, while the limit at the date of share issue on a company’s gross assets will rise from £200,000 to £350,000. In addition, the limit of a company’s ‘new qualifying trade’ will go from two to three years for the 2023/24 tax year.

For investors, the annual limits on how much individuals can claim Capital Gains Tax and Income Tax re-investment reliefs will rise from £100,000 to £200,000.

There are also changes to Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), which are designed to make them more competitive. For example, REITs have needed to hold at least three properties, but where one commercial property is worth more than £20m within the REIT, this requirement is removed from April. There is also a rule change for properties within REITs that are sold within three years of significant development. These properties have been seen as outside of the property rental business, but this rule is being amended, as are the rules for deducting tax from income distributions generated by a REIT property when they are paid to partnerships.

If you want to find out more about what other measures were introduced, removed or changed in the Budget, you can see details on the Gov.uk website.

Contact us

There are numerous changes that may affect you and your business in the Budget, so if you want to be sure you are maximising the benefits and minimising the losses, then please get in touch with us and we will help you make the right financial decisions.

April 3, 2023