Pension - work doesnt do them!
Pension - work doesnt do them!
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Discussion

hman

Original Poster:

7,497 posts

218 months

Saturday 7th April 2012
quotequote all
Probably awful grammar in the title I know.

Anyway, I have been working for a company for the last 9 months, they are a manufacturing company that do not get involved with pensions at all - and due to the size of the company they wont have to for years it would seem.

I have a few pensions which I have stopped paying into as I left the companies which were relevant to them, so should I start paying into one of them again? at the moment the extra cash is coming in handy but I'm not getting any tax relief on it like I would if I was paying into a scheme and I have a nagging feeling that I should be stashing it away in a pension fund.

Any reccomendations for a scheme with no employer contributions or are they all much of a muchness??

Ponk

1,382 posts

216 months

Saturday 7th April 2012
quotequote all
If your existing pensions are linked to previous employers it's unlikely you will be able to restart contributions.

Can't help RE private pensions I'm afraid.

Kudos

2,674 posts

198 months

Saturday 7th April 2012
quotequote all
Has been debated to death on here, but if your employer doesn't contribute I'm of the opinion that there are much better investments out there

The Leaper

5,511 posts

230 months

Saturday 7th April 2012
quotequote all
Highly unlikely that you could contribute again to one of your old pension plans.

It seems that you have amassed several bits, which in principle is OK, although do ensure that you keep the administrators informed of any changes of address etc so that they can locate you when it comes to payment. Tracing old pensions can be a bh.

All employers will shortly be required by new UK legislation to have a pension plan for their employees, and contribute towards it. Employees join it automatically by default, but can opt out if they wish. Google NEST and you can get all the relevant information.

Meanwhile, you could always start your own personal pension plan, and when NEST starts opt out (forgoing your employer's contribution).

You could also transfer all your old bits to the new personal pension although you'll need to be careful about accrued rights and what you might be giving up unknowingly. You could consider using an IFA for this.

R.

cailean

917 posts

197 months

Monday 9th April 2012
quotequote all
Have you looked at opening a SIPP via Selftrade? You can then buy shares or a wide range of unit trusts in the SIPP "wrapper". Your money goes into SippdealXtra who claims the basic tax refunds and then you transfer funds to Selftrade where the investments are bought/sold/held. You can transfer in your old employer schemes into the Selftrade SIPP as well and then buy investments with the transferred in value.

hman

Original Poster:

7,497 posts

218 months

Monday 9th April 2012
quotequote all
Sounds good!

Kudos

2,674 posts

198 months

Tuesday 10th April 2012
quotequote all
hman said:
Sounds good!
Beware of fees etc

98elise

31,466 posts

185 months

Wednesday 11th April 2012
quotequote all
Buy a BTL.

My old work pension has enough in it to buy a 2 or 3 bed house right now. As I've stopped paying into it it will probably be worth nothing by the time i retire. Even if is worth something, the capital will never be seen again.

I'd rather have something I tangable, that I can cash in at any time, or leave to my kids.