What to do with £200k
What to do with £200k
Author
Discussion

Legacywr

Original Poster:

14,153 posts

208 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
As per title, what to do with £200k?

I’m maxed out on PB’s.
Use my ISA allowance.
Good pension.
No mortgage.

Quite enjoy working, so no plans to retire.

Maybe trade some of it myself?

Other options?

BlindedByTheLights

1,880 posts

117 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
I’ll look after it for you…

Legacywr

Original Poster:

14,153 posts

208 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
BlindedByTheLights said:
I ll look after it for you
What car would you buy?

lizardbrain

3,436 posts

57 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
I keep a seperate trading account with 3% of net for trading. But recently I ve been thinking of moving it to a poly market account a think it would be more fun. Is this available in the uk? I havn t got that far

Personally I think kids, nicer house or shorter commute are hard to beat for impact


Edited by lizardbrain on Sunday 14th December 19:03

ATM

20,585 posts

239 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
lizardbrain said:
I keep a seperate trading account with 3% of net for trading. But recently I ve been thinking of moving it to a poly market account a think it would be more fun. Is this available in the uk? I havn t got that far
Spread Betting account

It's tax free in UK and you can trade almost any asset but without holding anything as you only gamble on the price movement

Cats_pyjamas

1,810 posts

168 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
Further pension contributions. Possibly gilts?

Or if you're that comfortable, spend it. A 911 GT3 would go a fair way to consuming that lump.

Legacywr

Original Poster:

14,153 posts

208 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
A bit more info in relation to some of the replies.

I’m not upwardly mobile house wise, and I don’t need a bigger house than I have now.

My kids are ok.

Car wise I’m sorted, I already have 2 Old Ford’s I don’t drive… always hanker after a Mk1 Lotus Cortina, though.

No point in putting extra into my pension now that the gowernmemt are going to steal 40%.

Simpo Two

90,475 posts

285 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
Boat.

Cabbage Patch

316 posts

107 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
Legacywr said:
No point in putting extra into my pension now that the gowernmemt are going to steal 40%.
How does that work?

Legacywr

Original Poster:

14,153 posts

208 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
Cabbage Patch said:
Legacywr said:
No point in putting extra into my pension now that the gowernmemt are going to steal 40%.
How does that work?
Inheritance wise, I mean.

RSTurboPaul

12,604 posts

278 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
Physical precious metals.

BlindedByTheLights

1,880 posts

117 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
Legacywr said:
BlindedByTheLights said:
I ll look after it for you
What car would you buy?
McLaren 720s, the change would go on track days and tyres smile

silentbrown

10,223 posts

136 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
Legacywr said:
Inheritance wise, I mean.
If you're bothered about inheritance tax, and don't need the money, gifting it now would be a smart move.

IHT is a tax on people who don't trust their kids smile

Gargamel

15,834 posts

281 months

Sunday 14th December
quotequote all
silentbrown said:
If you're bothered about inheritance tax, and don't need the money, gifting it now would be a smart move.

IHT is a tax on people who don't trust their kids smile
Decent charitable donation, nice holiday, chunk on the kids, hospitality for a few mates at a sporting event of your choice - spending it is never a problem.


If you want to invest it - drip it into market trackers over the next six - twelve months in chunks. Spread your risk

Cabbage Patch

316 posts

107 months

Legacywr said:
Cabbage Patch said:
Legacywr said:
No point in putting extra into my pension now that the gowernmemt are going to steal 40%.
How does that work?
Inheritance wise, I mean.
Depending on your current earnings, whether you have any carry forward allowance, your position regarding LTA and your age, then dropping a lump into your pension could be a great idea. 25% tax free lump sum and the ability to withdraw at a lower marginal tax rate than you paid in at, if done correctly.

Someone will pay IHT on the £200k when you die whether it’s in the pension or not, it’s just that using the pension tax breaks you can make it go further.

Or, crack on and spend it.

PovertyPrince

566 posts

46 months

Give it to me you can have a 20% return in 3 days.

Disclaimer: I’m going to dump it all on black.