Information
Factsheets
PERSONAL
AND STAKEHOLDER PENSIONS
Personal and Stakeholder Pensions are
common types of ‘registered pension schemes’. A registered
pension scheme allows the member to obtain tax relief on contributions
into the scheme and tax free growth of the fund.
A personal pension is a privately funded pension plan. A stakeholder
pension is a more tightly regulated personal pension plan particularly
over charging levels.
We highlight below the main areas of importance. It is important that
professional advice is sought on pension issues relevant to your personal
circumstances.
Key Features
Personal pensions
- Personal pensions are privately funded
plans organised on money purchase lines.
- Contributions are invested for
long-term growth up to the selected retirement age.
- At retirement which may be between the
ages of 50 (rising to 55 by 2010) and 75 the accumulated fund is
generally turned into retirement benefits – an income and a tax-free
lump sum.
- Gross contributions up to the higher
of £3,600 or 100% of earnings can be made each tax year with
entitlement to tax relief subject to a maximum allowance of £235,000
per annum (for 2008/09) rising to £255,000 per annum by 2010.
- There is a single lifetime limit on
the amount of pension savings that qualifies for tax relief is
currently £1.65 million but rising to £1.8 million by 2010.
- Contributions over the maximum amount
attracting tax relief can be made without limit.
- All contributions are payable net of
basic rate tax relief, leaving the provider to claim the tax back from
HMRC.
- Higher rate relief is given as a
reduction in the taxpayer’s tax bill. This is dealt with by claiming
tax relief through the self assessment system.
Stakeholder pensions
In addition to the features above for
personal pensions, a stakeholder pension has the following constraints on
the pension provider:
- a minimum payment cannot be set higher
than £20, whether for regular or one-off contributions
- the management charges are set at an
annual maximum of 1.5% for the first ten years and then 1% of the
stakeholder owner’s fund thereafter
- there must be no penalties when the
owner stops contributing or transfers the fund elsewhere.
Persons eligible for a personal
pension
All UK residents may have a personal or
stakeholder pension. This includes non-taxpayers such as children and
non-earning spouses. However, they will only be entitled to tax
relief on gross contributions of up to £3,600 per annum.
Relief for
individuals’ contributions
There is no restriction on the amount of
contributions an individual can pay into a registered scheme, only on the
amount of tax relief given. This means that unlimited contributions may be
made to, and retained by, a registered pension scheme up to an annual
allowance of £235,000 per annum for 2008/09. Investment income and
capital gains will accrue tax-free within the fund. The annual allowance
does not apply to contributions made in the year in which the pension
benefit is taken in full.
An individual is entitled to tax relief on personal contributions in any
given tax year up to the higher of 100% of ‘relevant UK earnings’
(broadly employment income or trading profit) and the annual allowance of
£235,000.
Methods of giving
relief
Tax relief on contributions are given at
the individual’s marginal rate of tax.
An individual may obtain tax relief on personal contributions he makes to
a registered scheme in one of three ways:
- under relief at source for
contributions with higher rate relief claimed through the self
assessment system;
- under the net pay system where
contributions are made by an employer to a registered scheme;
- by making a claim to relief where
contributions are made to a retirement annuity contract. (These are
old schemes started before the introduction of personal pensions.
The provider of the scheme may require payments to be made under the
‘relief at source’ rules from April 2006).
Employer contributions
There is a single rule for allowing a
deduction in respect of employer contributions to a registered pension
scheme. They provide for a deduction for unlimited sums subject to
the contributions actually being paid in the period and paid ‘wholly and
exclusively’ for the purpose of the business.
Statutory spreading provisions are introduced for exceptionally large
employer contributions. A contribution will only be spread where it
is more than 210% of the contribution paid in the previous period and the
amount of the excess is at least £500,000.
Annual allowance
Despite there being no limits on
contributions that can be paid into registered schemes under the regime,
the annual allowance acts as a control.
The annual allowance provides for the annual increase in an individual’s
rights under all registered pension schemes to be calculated. This is then
compared with the annual allowance and any excess charged to income tax at
40%.
For 2008/09 the annual allowance is set at £235,000. In order to lessen
the effect of the annual allowance when someone is close to retirement, it
will not be applied in any year in which the benefit is taken in full.
Example
Jo is a shareholder/director in his
family company. He draws an annual salary of £5,000 and takes significant
dividends out of the company.
He has a self invested personal pension (SIPP). Under the regime, Jo would
be able to pay an annual contribution of £5,000 (gross) (with tax relief)
into his SIPP.
The company may be able to make unlimited contributions but to the extent
they exceed £230,000 (ie £235,000 annual allowance less the £5,000 Jo
has paid) Jo will suffer a 40% tax charge on the excess.
In order for the company to obtain tax relief, the contribution needs to
satisfy the ‘wholly and exclusively’ test.
The Lifetime Allowance
The second key control under the new
regime will be the lifetime allowance.
Although individuals can save as much as they like in registered schemes
under the new regime, when they start to draw benefits (a ‘benefit
crystallisation event’) the value of their fund will be tested against
the lifetime allowance and any excess subject to the lifetime allowance
charge.
There are a number of benefit crystallisation events. They cover:
- the different ways an individual can
begin to take a pension;
- the receipt of a lump sum in
connection with a pension;
- the receipt of certain lump sums paid
out in connection with the death of the individual; and
- the transfer of funds from registered
schemes to certain overseas pension schemes.
On the first benefit crystallisation
event the calculation will be straightforward, a comparison between the
value being attributed to the event and the then lifetime allowance. Where
there has already been an event, the calculation is more complex. The
value of the first benefit crystallisation event is uprated by the
proportionate increase in the standard lifetime allowance and this uprated
figure, referred to as the ‘previously used amount’, is compared to
the individual’s lifetime allowance at the second date. Any excess
lifetime allowance is available to be used against the new benefit
crystallisation event.
The lifetime allowance has been set as follows:
2007/08 - £1.6 million
2008/09 - £1.65 million
2009/10 - £1.75 million
2010/11 - £1.8 million
Thereafter the limit will be reviewed every five years.
Where funds in excess of the lifetime allowance are be taken as a lump sum
the rate of charge is 55%. The lifetime allowance charge rate on the
balance of funds in excess of the lifetime allowance has been set at 25%.
Protection from the
lifetime allowance charge
A person may have had pension rights
valued in excess of the lifetime limit for 2005/06 of £1.5 million when
the pension rules were introduced on 6 April 2006 (known as A-day). In
such cases there are two forms of protection.
Primary protection
Protection is given to the value of pre
A-day pension rights and benefits in excess of £1.5 million. The
pre A-day value will be indexed in line with the indexation of the
statutory lifetime allowance up to the date that benefits are taken.
Enhanced protection
This is available whatever the value of the
fund so long as active membership of approved pension schemes ceased
before A-day. Provided that active membership is not resumed all
benefits coming into payment after A-day will normally be exempt from the
lifetime allowance charge.
This is likely to be beneficial for those with funds in excess of £1.5
million by April 2006 and for those with funds below that level but who
expect investment growth well above inflation.
Example
|
|
Primary
protection
|
Enhanced
protection
|
|
Fund at A-day
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£2,000,000
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£2,000,000
|
|
Fund at retirement
|
£3,000,000
|
£3,000,000
|
|
Revalued A-day fund after
increase in line with lifetime allowance - say
|
£2,600,000
|
N/A
|
|
Excess subject to lifetime
allowance tax charge at 25%/55%
|
£400,000
|
Nil
|
Those requiring protection have three
years from A-day to register.
Scheme benefits
Up to 25% of the pension fund, below the
lifetime allowance, can be paid as a tax-free lump sum.
However, subject to the lump sum, the balance of the fund must be secured
by age 75 using one of:
- a pension - guaranteed by an insurance
company (ie an annuity);
- a pension - promised by an employer;
or
- alternatively secured income (ASI)
where security is gained by reducing the maximum income that can be
taken.
If death occurs before the pension vests
it can be paid to dependants as a lump sum subject to the lifetime
allowance charge, if relevant, or as pension income subject to income tax.
Investments
Broadly pension schemes are allowed to
hold all types of investment subject to some restrictions which are
mentioned below.
There are limits on holdings of shares in the sponsoring employer’s
company (of 5% of the fund value) and on loans to employers.
Loans to employers must:
- be secured as a first charge on
assets;
- have an interest rate at least equal
to the CTSA rate (currently base rate + 1%);
- not last for more than five years;
- not be more than 50% of the value of
the fund at the date the loan is taken out; and
- be repaid by equal annual instalments.
Scheme borrowing is limited to 50% of
scheme assets at the date the loan is taken out.
Originally almost unlimited powers of investment were proposed for the new
regime but, in a change of heart, the government announced the removal of
the power to invest in residential property or certain other assets such
as fine wines, classic cars and art and antiques from pension schemes
which are ’investment regulated’. This includes Self Invested
Personal Pension Schemes (SIPPS) and Small Self Administered Schemes (SSAS).
The effect is to remove all tax advantages from holding taxable property
directly or indirectly in such schemes and will broadly mean that it is at
least no more advantageous to hold such assets in a pension scheme than it
is to hold them personally.
The Role of the
Employer
To encourage more people to save in
pension schemes, the government has placed greater responsibility on
employers to provide access to pension provision.
There is no requirement for an employer to pay employer contributions into
a scheme. If the employer chooses to do so, the employer
contributions will be paid gross and will be treated as a business
expense.
There is also no requirement for the employee to enter an employer
provided scheme. An employee may decide to go direct to a pension provider
(usually an insurance company).
Employers' stakeholder obligations
- A non-exempted employer must, in
consultation with the employees, designate a registered plan they can
join.
- The employer must then bring the plan
to the employees' attention, mainly by allowing the provider to
distribute information and promotional materials and arranging
workplace meetings for the provider to talk to the employees - at the
provider's expense.
- If the employee wants to become a
member of the employer promoted scheme, the employer must set up a
contribution deduction facility on the firm's payroll system.
- The contributions must then be paid
into the stakeholder scheme within 19 days of the end of the month in
which the contributions were deducted.
Exempted employers
These are:
- employers with fewer than five
employees
- employers sponsoring a group personal
pension plan and investing at least 3% of payroll from their own
resources. There are a number of additional conditions including the
plan having no termination or transfer charges and offering a payroll
deduction facility for employee contributions
- employers sponsoring an occupational
scheme which is open to all employees, whether or not they have joined
it.
Most occupational money purchase schemes
and some company organised group pension plans are thus exempted from the
stakeholder regime. However both can opt to come within the
stakeholder scheme. This may be attractive due to the low cost charging
structure, particularly if employees want to make additional
contributions.
HOW WE CAN HELP
This information sheet provides general information on the making of
pension provision. Please refer to us for more detailed advice if
you are interested in making provision for a pension.
If you are an employer, the employer obligations must be complied with.
Please talk to us if you are unclear as to whether you are an exempted or
non-exempted employer.
For information of
users: This material is published for the information of clients.
It provides only an overview of the regulations in force at the date of
publication, and no action should be taken without consulting the
detailed legislation or seeking professional advice. Therefore no
responsibility for loss occasioned by any person acting or refraining
from action as a result of the material can be accepted by the authors
or the firm.
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