Taking a pension early
Taking a pension early
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Discussion

worsy

Original Poster:

6,502 posts

199 months

Monday 21st October 2024
quotequote all
I have a small DB pension that will pay 8844 at 60 years old. I'm 53 at the moment and am a higher rate taxpayer. I'm planning on working to 63 (at least) and so I will be paying an additional 8844 (or whatever the summ will be) into my DC pension to avoid punitive tax charges on paye income.

If I was to take that pension at 55, it would pay out 7457 at today's rate.

I've calculated that by taking the pension at 55 I would be net negative by 76 years old, assuming DC growth of 5% and DB increase of 3%.

What would you do?


LeoSayer

7,704 posts

268 months

Monday 21st October 2024
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A DB pension will increase your taxable income.

What are these punitive tax charges on PAYE income you refer to?

Countdown

47,696 posts

220 months

Monday 21st October 2024
quotequote all
How is your health and what's your family history like?

I mean if your great grandparents are still alive then I'd not take the DB pension early. OTOH

if your family are the type to live fast / die young then you might as well take it early because you'll probably cark it before you are "net negative"

worsy

Original Poster:

6,502 posts

199 months

Monday 21st October 2024
quotequote all
LeoSayer said:
A DB pension will increase your taxable income.

What are these punitive tax charges on PAYE income you refer to?
Yes it will and hence if I deflect the money into my DC I will avoid extra tax.

Loss of Personal allowance at 100k.


Countdown said:
How is your health and what's your family history like?

I mean if your great grandparents are still alive then I'd not take the DB pension early. OTOH

if your family are the type to live fast / die young then you might as well take it early because you'll probably cark it before you are "net negative"
Mother's side good, Father's side not so good.



LeoSayer

7,704 posts

268 months

Monday 21st October 2024
quotequote all
What would I do?

I'd avoid taking the DB scheme until I needed it for retirement income. Have you modelled this approach?

I would also contribute to my DC pension in order to defer my income now until the future when I can take 25% tax free and pay basic rate tax on drawdown.

I haven't done the maths on that but I don't think you can really compare a 5% potential investment return with inflation linked (albeit likely capped) DB pension rises.

bompey

617 posts

259 months

Monday 21st October 2024
quotequote all
worsy said:
LeoSayer said:
A DB pension will increase your taxable income.

What are these punitive tax charges on PAYE income you refer to?
Yes it will and hence if I deflect the money into my DC I will avoid extra tax.

Loss of Personal allowance at 100k.
I don’t think you can recycle by drawing down one pension to pay in to another. I think you get a much reduced contribution limit to your remaining pensions. Please get expert advice on this otherwise it could cost you.
Personally I would defer the DB pension as this ought to give an increased payout when you do start to draw it, and continue to maximise pension contributions.

Mogul

3,060 posts

247 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
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A lot can happen in 2 years but you are on the right track.

Nothing to stop you taking that DB pension at 55 to supplement the income you continue to make from employment and if that extra (taxable pension) income means that you are comfortable sacrificing/exchanging more of your ongoing/continuing employment income for a larger DC pension contribution, nothing should stop you.

Just keep an eye on your health and the possibility(!) that the goal posts will keep moving.

worsy

Original Poster:

6,502 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
bompey said:
I don’t think you can recycle by drawing down one pension to pay in to another. I think you get a much reduced contribution limit to your remaining pensions. Please get expert advice on this otherwise it could cost you.
Personally I would defer the DB pension as this ought to give an increased payout when you do start to draw it, and continue to maximise pension contributions.
You can't recycle DC pensions, but you can for DB. Deferring the pension will not increase it sadly. I have another DB pension that I can, and that is the plan there.

LeoSayer said:
What would I do?

I'd avoid taking the DB scheme until I needed it for retirement income. Have you modelled this approach?

I would also contribute to my DC pension in order to defer my income now until the future when I can take 25% tax free and pay basic rate tax on drawdown.

I haven't done the maths on that but I don't think you can really compare a 5% potential investment return with inflation linked (albeit likely capped) DB pension rises.
As above, i can't defer it frown. I already contribute to my DC pension to keep me below the threshold for losing my allowance.

Zigster

1,982 posts

168 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
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Are you sure your figures for the DB pension at 55 and at 60 are correct? The difference looks smaller than I would expect, particularly once inflationary revaluation is taken into account.

Broadly, though, why take the DB pension early if all you are going to do is recycle the income into a SIPP? What are you going to do with the PCLS at 55? Why not leave the DB until 60 and then start recycling into a SIPP?

worsy

Original Poster:

6,502 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
Zigster said:
Are you sure your figures for the DB pension at 55 and at 60 are correct? The difference looks smaller than I would expect, particularly once inflationary revaluation is taken into account.

Broadly, though, why take the DB pension early if all you are going to do is recycle the income into a SIPP? What are you going to do with the PCLS at 55? Why not leave the DB until 60 and then start recycling into a SIPP?
Yup. Latest numbers. I can take it at 50 (well that ship passed) but as soon as I go below 55 the value plummets. Does seem very odd and hence the questions.

I wasn't going to take a lump sum, figures are based on full pension. I'll take my lump sum from my SIPP when I actually retire.

IJWS15

2,133 posts

109 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
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It is odd that a DB scheme doesn’t offer an increase for deferring. Have you spoken to them as it may be “at the trustees discretion”.

I ‘retired’ last September taking two DB schemes early (reduced) and two late (increased). Am now unexpectedly contracting and making significant payments into a SIPP to make sure I stay under £100k taxable.

Boringvolvodriver

11,390 posts

67 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
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IJWS15 said:
It is odd that a DB scheme doesn’t offer an increase for deferring. Have you spoken to them as it may be “at the trustees discretion”.

I ‘retired’ last September taking two DB schemes early (reduced) and two late (increased). Am now unexpectedly contracting and making significant payments into a SIPP to make sure I stay under £100k taxable.
I know my DB scheme applied the same % pa as an increase if I deferred as they applied for taking early

worsy

Original Poster:

6,502 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
IJWS15 said:
It is odd that a DB scheme doesn’t offer an increase for deferring. Have you spoken to them as it may be “at the trustees discretion”.

I ‘retired’ last September taking two DB schemes early (reduced) and two late (increased). Am now unexpectedly contracting and making significant payments into a SIPP to make sure I stay under £100k taxable.
It's in the FAQs and specifically excludes it. I can of course ask, but expect i'll be directed to the FAQs.

TownIdiot

3,527 posts

23 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
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worsy said:
It's in the FAQs and specifically excludes it. I can of course ask, but expect i'll be directed to the FAQs.
Its quite a complex area and I am not qualified so this needs to be checked but I am pretty sure you can recycle the DB pension payments. Everything I read on this relates to DC schemes.
On that basis I'd be taking it sooner rather than later.

worsy

Original Poster:

6,502 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
TownIdiot said:
worsy said:
It's in the FAQs and specifically excludes it. I can of course ask, but expect i'll be directed to the FAQs.
Its quite a complex area and I am not qualified so this needs to be checked but I am pretty sure you can recycle the DB pension payments. Everything I read on this relates to DC schemes.
On that basis I'd be taking it sooner rather than later.
That's my understanding too.

Zigster

1,982 posts

168 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
worsy said:
Zigster said:
Are you sure your figures for the DB pension at 55 and at 60 are correct? The difference looks smaller than I would expect, particularly once inflationary revaluation is taken into account.

Broadly, though, why take the DB pension early if all you are going to do is recycle the income into a SIPP? What are you going to do with the PCLS at 55? Why not leave the DB until 60 and then start recycling into a SIPP?
Yup. Latest numbers. I can take it at 50 (well that ship passed) but as soon as I go below 55 the value plummets. Does seem very odd and hence the questions.

I wasn't going to take a lump sum, figures are based on full pension. I'll take my lump sum from my SIPP when I actually retire.
I guess my point is that something seems off.

If you take £7,457 pa from age 55, inflationary increases of, say, 3% pa would give a pension at 60 of £8,644 pa. Which is very close to the pension you have quoted from 60 of £8,844. Yet you’ve had the benefit of five years’ worth of pension.

So is it a really old pension (say in respect of pre April 1997 service) which doesn’t increase in payment? If not, something seems odd. Early retirement reductions should generally be broadly cost neutral but yours seems to be giving you five years’ worth of pension for free.

If the figures are as you say, there doesn’t seem to be any benefit in not taking it as soon as you are able at age 55. But I wonder if your age 60 figure isn’t including inflation between now and age 60?

BTW, public sector schemes generally don’t offer a late retirement increase so there is usually no reason to defer past the normal retirement age (usually 60 for most service for those approaching retirement now).


TownIdiot

3,527 posts

23 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
Zigster said:
If the figures are as you say, there doesn’t seem to be any benefit in not taking it as soon as you are able at age 55. But I wonder if your age 60 figure isn’t including inflation between now and age 60?
Good spot.

The aged 60 figure will be subject to 5 years inflation increases i reckon.

If the MPAA rules don't apply I'd still take it now.

worsy

Original Poster:

6,502 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
The figures are current values and both will rise. I applied a 3% uplift from now to 90 years old on both the 55 and 60 year old pension values to calculate the negative net age.
At 75 the value would be 13468 and 16451 per annum respectively. I also calculated at a conservative 5% growth (2% + 3% inflation) the 5 years of contributions might have grown by 3242.

If I lived to 85 the net loss would therefore be 30k+.

Gamble time smile

One think I hadn't mentioned but did think about was the fact that on my death, my spouse would then inherit 50% of the remainder.


eyeslikealemur

47 posts

19 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
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DB pension payments are currently classed as an allowance payment not pension payment (may change in 8 days).

They therefore don't affect DC or SIPP pensions at all.

Sheepshanks

39,417 posts

143 months

Tuesday 22nd October 2024
quotequote all
worsy said:
You can't recycle DC pensions, but you can for DB.
Isn't that the wrong way around? I know the rules are complicated, and, as this is my first year of retirement I haven't done it yet, but my IFA's plan for me (and wife) is to pay money into our SIPPs even though we're drawing from them tax-free.

On a DB pension, can you even change the amount it pays? I had a very old one that paid at 65 (I was still working elsewhere) and there was no option to do anything but take the money.