Pension percentage you should put in
Discussion
As much as you possibly can! I'm 43 and I put monthly monies away into a short term savings with around 4.5% interest, long term investment savings (hopefully 7% or 8%) and then into my pension. I have a standard work based pension and also a private pension. So four saving avenues I suppose.
The trouble is, we were never taught things like this at school, so its all just guess work! At least I can work out simultaneous equations though. pfft!
The trouble is, we were never taught things like this at school, so its all just guess work! At least I can work out simultaneous equations though. pfft!
What you can sensibly afford. There is a weigh up between building a pot and having cash(flow) and savings day to day. It also depends when you want to retire and what lifestyle you wish/require.
Personally we are fairly frugal, but want to retire at a reasonable age.
I put in 18% (plus 8% from my employer), but it is largely covered by my shift and overtime accurals, it also goes some way to reduce tax liability as a 40% tax payer on some of my earnings. If that were to change then I can always back it off. Make hay while the sun shines, as they say.
Personally we are fairly frugal, but want to retire at a reasonable age.
I put in 18% (plus 8% from my employer), but it is largely covered by my shift and overtime accurals, it also goes some way to reduce tax liability as a 40% tax payer on some of my earnings. If that were to change then I can always back it off. Make hay while the sun shines, as they say.
Edited by Cats_pyjamas on Monday 3rd February 17:54
One "general rule" is dependent on when you start saving for a pension, take your age, divide by 2 then put that percentage of your gross salary into pension.So start at 40, put 20% in.
As much as you can, after you have repaid your high debt and built up your emergency fund, is a better rule though!
As much as you can, after you have repaid your high debt and built up your emergency fund, is a better rule though!
Muzzer79 said:
The only sensible answer is as much as you can afford.
If you 'over-contribute' - great, you get an earlier or better retirement.
If you 'under-contribute' - well, you're contributing as much as you can so there's not much you can do about that.
Agreed. Life is a balance - you want to enjoy the journey but contributing even an extra £50 / month now can make a decent difference in 25 years time thanks to compound interest. Pension contributions really make a difference at higher tax rates, especially if you have a salary sacrifice scheme. I live in Scotland where the 42% income tax rate kicks in at £43,663.If you 'over-contribute' - great, you get an earlier or better retirement.
If you 'under-contribute' - well, you're contributing as much as you can so there's not much you can do about that.
Afternoon,
Just to answer the OPs question I put in about 13% (then my employer adds another 5%, I think).
Like others have said - it is really dependent upon what you can afford and your priorities of living a life now too. However as you start getting closer to retirement, you will wish you made a slightly different call when you were 20 years old....
Just to answer the OPs question I put in about 13% (then my employer adds another 5%, I think).
Like others have said - it is really dependent upon what you can afford and your priorities of living a life now too. However as you start getting closer to retirement, you will wish you made a slightly different call when you were 20 years old....
I'm mid 40's and paying 35% in to my workplace pension with the company adding another 4%. (I'm not far into the 40% tax bracket so not a huge earner)
Now that they have increased the earning threshold for child benefit clawback, I'm tempted to reduce my contribution to 30% and to invest the extra into my S&S ISA.
If anyone is in their 40s and still paying the minimum into their pension, log in to your providers website and have a look what the projections are looking like. Most people pay in way too little.
While you are on your pension website, have a look at the default fund they have put you in. It will be a very "safe", very low growth fund. If you still have 10+ years to retirement, do ourself a favour and move to a higher growth fund.
-I am not a financial adviser. This is just my thoughts and not financial advice.
Now that they have increased the earning threshold for child benefit clawback, I'm tempted to reduce my contribution to 30% and to invest the extra into my S&S ISA.
If anyone is in their 40s and still paying the minimum into their pension, log in to your providers website and have a look what the projections are looking like. Most people pay in way too little.
While you are on your pension website, have a look at the default fund they have put you in. It will be a very "safe", very low growth fund. If you still have 10+ years to retirement, do ourself a favour and move to a higher growth fund.
-I am not a financial adviser. This is just my thoughts and not financial advice.
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