Savings tax and basic/higher/additional tax
Savings tax and basic/higher/additional tax
Author
Discussion

ILikeCake

Original Poster:

386 posts

160 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
Thinking of whether to stick rainy day/emergency funds in Premium Bonds or a savings account (no ISA allowance left).

According to the .gov website, a basic rate tax payer gets £1000 allowance for savings interest, higher rate get £500, and additional rate get £0.

What I can't confirm is whether contributing to your pension can shift you into a lower band. E.g.

Person A earns £50,270 and is a basic rate taxpayer. They earn £1000 in savings interest; no tax is due as they are within the allowance.

Person B earns £50,271 and is a higher rate taxpayer. They earn £1000 in savings interest; their allowance is £500 so they will be taxed at 40% on the £500 above the allowance (40% of £500 = £200 in tax). So they are left with £800.

Is my understanding correct? If so, putting aside how mad this policy is (earning £1 could cost someone £200!?), could person B contribute £1 to their pension? I.e. putting them in the "lower" band and gaining a larger allowance?


NerveAgent

3,662 posts

236 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
I guess the missing bit here is that the savings interest is treated as income.

So 49271 + 1000 would reduce your allowance to £500. But it would mostly be taxed at 20% in this scenario.

Yes it’s based off adjusted net income. So pension contributions can take you back under the threshold.

OllyAitch

49 posts

177 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
If Person B put that extra £1 into their pension, it would bring them back into basic rate territory, so they’d get the full £1,000 savings allowance instead of £500.
It’s one of those quirky tax cliff edges where a tiny change can make a big difference.