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  • Financial Planning
    • Introduction to Financial Planning
  • Protection
    • Why Protection is Important
    • Life Assurance
    • Family Income Benefit
    • Income Protection
    • Private Medical Insurance
    • Critical Illness
  • Savings & Investments
    • Introduction to Savings & Investments
    • Capital Investment Bonds
    • Offshore Collectives
    • Junior ISAs
    • National Savings Products
    • Endowments
    • ISAs
    • Equities
    • Collectives
    • Unit Trusts
    • OEICs
    • Investment Trusts
    • Fixed Interest Investments
  • Business Protection
    • Introduction to Business Protection
    • Key Person
    • Share Protection
    • Directors' & Staff Benefits
    • Income Protection
    • Relevant Life Cover
    • Employers' Liability
    • Professional Indemnity
  • Mortgages
    • Introduction to Mortgages
    • Mortgage Repayment
    • Remortgaging
    • Standard Variable Rate
    • Fixed Rate Mortgages
    • Tracker Mortgages
    • First Time Buyer
    • Cashback Mortgages
    • Offset Mortgages
    • Second Charge Mortgages
    • Buy to Let
    • Self Build Mortgages
  • Equity Release
    • Introduction to Equity Release
    • Types of Equity Release
    • Lifetime Mortgage
    • Home Reversion Plan
    • Drawdown Lifetime Mortgage
    • Home Income Plan
    • Costs
  • Pensions
    • Retirement Planning
    • National Employment Savings Trust (NEST)
    • Occupational Pensions / Auto Enrolment
    • Annuities
    • Income Drawdown / Unsecured Pension
    • Personal
    • Stakeholder
    • State Pension
    • SSAS
    • SIPP
    • Executive Pension Plan
    • Final Salary Pensions
  • Taxation
    • Introduction to Taxation
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  • Personal Pensions

Personal Pensions

Personal Pension Plans

A personal pension plan helps you save money for retirement and is available to any United Kingdom resident who is between the ages of 16 and 75 (Children under 16 cannot start a plan in their own right but a Legal Guardian can start one on their behalf). You, in conjunction with your adviser, choose the pension provider and make the arrangements for paying the contributions to the plan.

You can start a personal pension even if you have a workplace pension or if you’re self-employed and don’t have a workplace pension. You don’t have to be working to take out a Personal Pension Plan and you can also provide a Personal Pension Plan for your spouse/partner or your child/children.

When you contribute to a Personal Pension plan, your money is invested by the pension provider (usually an insurance company) to build up a fund/pension pot over a number of years.

Tax relief

If you’re a basic rate taxpayer, your pension provider will claim back Income Tax at the basic 20 per cent rate on your behalf on the contributions you make and add it to your pension pot. Higher rate taxpayers claim the additional rebate through their tax returns.

Contribution limits

The total amount (the ‘annual allowance’) you or your employer can contribute to a defined contribution personal pension scheme, or schemes, is limited to £40,000* per annum or your annual salary, whichever is lower. If you contribute more than that you will pay a tax charge. Your pension is also subject to a 'lifetime allowance' which is the total value of pension savings you can have before incurring a tax penalty. This figure is currently £1,073,100*.

Tax-free cash

Most schemes allow you to withdraw 25% of your fund tax-free from age 55 onwards. Subsequent withdrawals are subject to income tax.

The size of your pension pot will depend on:

  • the amount of money you paid into the plan
  • the performance of the plan’s investments
  • charges payable under the plan
  • advice charges (where applicable)

Taking your pension

Although most personal pension schemes specify an age when you can start withdrawing benefits from your personal pension (usually between 60 and 65) you are allowed to do that from age 55 if you wish. You don’t have to stop work to draw benefits from your plan.

Death Benefits

If you die before the age of 75 and haven’t purchased an annuity, your beneficiaries can inherit the entire pension fund as a lump sum or draw an income from it completely free of tax. If you’re over 75 years of age when you die, there will be tax to pay on any withdrawals made by the recipient of your fund.

*Tax year 2021/2022

THE VALUE OF PENSIONS AND THE INCOME THEY PRODUCE CAN FALL AS WELL AS RISE. YOU MAY GET BACK LESS THAN YOU INVESTED.

TAX TREATMENT VARIES ACCORDING TO INDIVIDUAL CIRCUMSTANCES AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.

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Company address: Vision Wealth Management, Westgate House, Banbury Road, Moreton Pinkney, Northamptonshire, NN11 3SQ.

 

T: 01327 317388  F: 01327 220044 E:info@visionwm.co.uk

 

Vision Wealth Management is a trading style of Charles Derby Wealth Management Limited, an appointed representative of Quilter Wealth Limited and Quilter Mortgage Planning Limited which are authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (https://register.fca.org.uk/s) No: 440718 and 217742.

 

Charles Derby Wealth Management Ltd is registered in England and Wales: 07629860. Registered Office: Senator House, 85 Queen Victoria Street, London, EC4V 4AB.

 

The guidance and/or information contained within this website is subject to the UK regulatory regime and is therefore targeted at consumers based in the UK

 

 

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