Tuesday 18 February 2014

The Annual Allowance

Individuals can save as much as they like towards their pensions each year, but there is a limit on the amount that will get tax relief. The maximum amount of pension savings that benefit from tax relief each year is called the annual allowance.
It includes employer contributions as well as individual and third party contributions. If the total from all sources – which is called pension input – is higher than the annual allowance then individuals may have to pay a tax charge on the excess amount.
The pension input is the increase in an individual’s pension savings over what is known as the pension input period. It is not necessarily the same as the contributions that have been made and received tax relief within the tax year.
If there is unused annual allowance from the three previous tax years then this can be carried forward to mitigate any excess pension input in the tax year in question.
The annual allowance charge is not payable in the tax year in which an individual dies and there is also no pension input for pension arrangements from which an individual becomes entitled to a serious ill health lump sum or a severe ill health pension where they are unlikely to be able to work again.
The annual allowance for tax year 2013/2014 is £50,000 as it was in 2011/2012 and 2012/2013. It reduces to £40,000 in 2014/2015 and is unlikely to increase in value before at least 2018.

The Pension Input

The pension input is made up of
  • The total annual increase in the value of an individual’s defined benefit (DB) pension rights for the pension input period, and
  • The contributions by or on behalf of the individual to defined contribution (DC) schemes for the pension input period.


In a DB scheme, the pension input is the difference, taking into account inflation, between the capital value of the pension an individual would have been entitled to receive at the start and end of the pension input period. Early retirement factors, contributions to added years AVCs and the value of death in service benefits can be ignored.
The opening and closing values for pension rights are calculated using a factor of 16:1.
If the DB scheme provides tax free cash in addition to the pension rather than by commutation then the amount of the tax free cash at the start and end of the pension input period is added on to the opening and closing pension values.
To take inflation into account, the opening value of the individual’s DB pension rights is increased by the annual rise in the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) to the September in the tax year before the one in which the pension input period ends, that means that the 12 month CPI increase to September 2012 is to be used to revalue the opening value of any pension input period ending in tax year 2013/2014.
Emma is a member of a final salary scheme that provides for each year of service a pension of 1/80th and an additional tax free lump sum of 3/80ths of annual pensionable salary. The scheme year and pension input period runs from 1 April to 31 March and in March 2014 Emma has completed twenty years pensionable service. Her pensionable salary increased from £42,000 to £50,000 following a promotion. Her pension input amount for the 2013/2014 tax year is:

Input period
Start date    End date
Completed years of pensionable service
19
20
Pensionable salary
£42,000
  £50,000
Accrued pension
£9975
 £12,500
Accrued pension x 16
£159,600
£200,000
Tax free cash
£29,925
£37,500
Opening value increased by CPI (2.2% Sept 2012)
£193,694
Closing value
£237,500
Pension input
£43,806
There is no pension input for deferred members of DB schemes as long as their benefits do not increase in value by more than CPI (or, if greater, in line with the scheme rules that applied at 14 October 2010) and they were deferred members for the whole of the pension input period.

Pension Transfers

Pension transfers don’t count towards the annual allowance unless they are a pension credit as a result of divorce from a non registered pension scheme.
Any contributions paid to the original scheme before the transfer are still tested against the annual allowance in the usual way.

The Pension Input Period

The pension input period does not have to match the tax year. Any pension input amounts paid after the pension input period end date but before the end of the tax year will not be tested against the annual allowance in that tax year but in the following tax year.
Individuals can have different pension input periods for different pension schemes they are a member of and there can be different pension input periods for different arrangements within the same scheme.
For a DC pension the first pension input period starts when the first contribution – no matter what the source – is made into it after 5 April 2006. Transfers in do not count and contracted out rebates did not either before they were abolished.
For a DB pension the first pension input period starts when benefits start accruing after 5 April 2006. For members before 6 April 2006, this will be 6 April 2006 and for individuals who join after 5 April 2006 this will usually be the date of joining pensionable service.
The first pension input period end date depends on whether the input period started before 6 April 2011 or not.

  • If it started before 6 April 2011 it would have ended on the anniversary of the start date unless it was changed.
  • If it started on or after 6 April 2011 it will end on the following 5 April unless it is changed.
  • Subsequent pension input periods start the day after the end of the previous input period and last a year unless it is changed.


For example, a first pension input period that started on 29 January 2007 would normally have ended on 29 January 2008 and subsequent pension input periods will normally run from 30 January to 29 January while a first pension input period that started on 29 January 2014 would normally have ended on 5 April 2014 and subsequent pension input periods will normally run from 6 April to 5 April.
If an individual dies or takes all their benefits from an arrangement the pension input period will continue to the end date.
The pension input period end date can be changed although it depends on the type of scheme as to who can change it.
If it is a DC scheme it can be changed by either the scheme administrator or member. If it is a DB scheme it can only be changed by the scheme administrator.
When changing the end date the following rules apply
  • A pension arrangement can only have one pension input period end date in a tax year.
  • The new end date can only be the current date or in the future. Before 19 July 2011 it could have been changed retrospectively.
  • If the first pension input end date started after 5 April 2011 the first end date is automatically the next 5 April. This can be ended sooner, or later than 5 April as long as it’s within a year of the start of the first pension input period.
  • Subsequent pension input periods normally last a year but can be closed early or extended to any date in the tax year following the tax year in which the pension input period started.


DB scheme administrators generally change members’ pension input periods so that they tie in with the scheme year end date or company accounting date.
HMRC does not have to be informed about changes to pension input periods.
If an individual wants to change the pension input period end date they need to contact the scheme administrator who may need the request in writing.
If both an individual and a scheme administrator change the end date for the same pension input period then it’s the first request which determines which date applies.

Carry Forward of Unused Annual Allowance

From tax year 2011/2012 individuals can carry forward unused annual allowance from the previous three tax years to the current tax year. This allows individuals to have pension input above the annual allowance in a tax year without facing a tax charge. This can be useful for people who have an unusually high level of pension input in a tax year, for example, because of promotion or a sudden pay rise.
  • Unused annual allowance can only be carried forward to the current tax year from the previous three tax years.
  • This can only be done after the current year’s annual allowance has been used up.
  • Unused allowance is used up starting from the earliest year available.
  • The individual must have been a member of a pension scheme at some point during the tax year being used to carry forward unused allowance. This could be as an active, deferred or retired member of a scheme.
  • For tax years 2008/2009 to 2010/2011 the annual allowance is deemed to be £50,000.
  • Following the reduction in Annual Allowance for 2014/15, the Carry Forward entitlement for previous tax years, up to and including 2013/14, will remain at £50,000
  • If there’s unused annual allowance to carry forward from a previous tax year but the annual allowance has been exceeded in a later tax year within the three year period that excess will use up some of the unused allowance from the previous tax year.

This does not apply to tax years 2009/2010 and 2010/2011 as any excess over £50,000 in those years does not use up previous years’ unused allowance. The excess is treated as zero. However, if contributions in 2010/11 or 2009/10 exceeded £50,000, no carry forward allowance is permitted.
  • For DB schemes, the pension input calculation method outlined above is used for all tax years to determine whether there is any unused allowance.

  • Although carry forward is from previous tax years, it is based on pension input in the pension input periods that end in the previous and current tax years.

Carry Forward & Tax Relief

  • There is no carry forward of tax relief from previous tax years. Tax relief is only given in the tax year the pension contribution is made.
  • Individual and employer contributions made to use up unused annual allowance are subject to the usual tax relief rules. Employer contributions are subject to the ‘wholly and exclusively’ test at the time they are made and tax relief on individual and third party contributions are limited to 100% of the individual’s UK relevant earnings (or £3600 if greater) in the tax year the contribution is made.
Stephen is a member of a defined benefit pension scheme and also has a SIPP which he funds from self employed earnings. He varies his contributions to the SIPP with a view to maximising them where possible as his self employed earnings change. In 2013/2014 he has made contributions in excess of the annual allowance after estimating what his pension input for the defined benefit scheme would be. The final position after confirmation of the pension input into the defined benefit scheme is:
Tax yearPension inputAnnual allowanceUnused allowanceCumulative carry forward available
2008/2009
£25,000
£50,000
£25,000
N/A
2009/2010
£62,000
£50,000
£0
N/A
2010/2011
£30,000
£50,000
£20,000
N/A
2011/2012
£70,000
£50,000
(£20,000)
£45,000
2012/2013
£40,000
£50,000
£10,000
£20,000
2013/2014
£85,000
£50,000
(£35,000)
£30,000
In 2011/2012, there was £45,000 unused allowance available. The pension input was £20,000 in excess of the annual allowance for 2011/2012 and has therefore used up £20,000 of the unused allowance from 2008/2009. The remaining £5000 unused allowance from 2008/2009 is lost for future tax years and the £20,000 unused allowance from 2010/2011 can be carried forward to 2012/2013 and if not used up to 2013/2014.In 2013/2014, there was £30,000 unused allowance available made up of £20,000 unused allowance from 2010/2011 and £10,000 from 2012/2013. The pension input was £35,000 in excess of the annual allowance for 2013/2014 and therefore uses up the £20,000 unused allowance from 2010/2011 and the £10,000 unused allowance from 2012/2013. There is still an excess of £5000 on which an annual allowance tax charge will be payable. There is no carry forward available for 2014/2015.

Information requirements

From tax year 2011/2012 scheme administrators must provide annual allowance information if individuals request it.
If an individual’s pension input to a pension scheme is greater than the annual allowance then the scheme administrator must provide details of the pension input to the scheme and the annual allowance for the tax year and each of the three previous tax years. This information must now be sent by the next 6 October following the tax year. For 2011/2012 this didn’t need to be done until 6 October 2013.
If an individual asks for annual allowance details the scheme administrator must provide it within three months, or by 6 October following the tax year if this is later.

Annual Allowance Charge

If the pension input exceeds the annual allowance and any carried forward unused allowance then there is a tax charge of up to 45% on the excess.
The amount payable depends on the rate of income tax that an individual would pay if the excess amount was included in their taxable income as the top slice of that income. The chargeable amount is
  • 20% on any excess that falls into the basic rate tax band
  • 40% on any excess that falls into the higher rate tax band
  • 45% on any excess that falls into the additional rate tax band
Where a relief at source pension contribution, usually to a personal pension, or a gift aid payment has been made in the tax year the basic rate tax band is extended as normal.

Example

Laurent earns £150,000 and as a result of contributions he has made to his personal pension and the increase in the value of his current employer’s defined benefit arrangement he has £32,000 excess pension saving on which the annual allowance charge is due.
Laurent’s contribution to his personal pension was £20,000 gross which means his higher rate and additional rate thresholds are extended by £20,000. His additional rate threshold would therefore start at £170,000.
Adding the £32,000 excess to Laurent’s earnings means that £20,000 of the excess will fall below his additional rate threshold and therefore be subject to 40% tax and the remaining £12,000 will be in excess of the additional rate threshold and be subject to 45% tax.
Laurent’s annual allowance charge will therefore be £13,400 (£20,000@40% + £12,000@45%).
The charge payable is the same whether a contribution is paid to an occupational pension or a personal pension.

Paying the Charge

The annual allowance charge is normally paid through self assessment. If an individual who does not complete a tax return incurs a liability then they should contact their tax office. The charge is payable even if the individual is not resident in the UK.
The charge can sometimes be paid out of pension benefits. This has been allowed since tax year 2011/2012.
Pension schemes can choose to offer this but they only have to pay the charge on an individual’s behalf if:
  • The charge is over £2000
  • The pension input to that scheme was greater than the annual allowance, and
  • The individual chooses to have the scheme meet the charge from their pension benefits.

The individual must choose to have the scheme to pay the charge by 31 July in the year following the end of the tax year the charge relates to. This means for a charge due for 2013/2014 the individual must make the decision for the scheme to pay by 31 July 2015.
The individual can only require that the scheme pays the charge on any excess over the annual allowance which occurred under the scheme.
If the scheme pays then the individual’s pension benefits are reduced.
  • In DC schemes the individual’s fund value is reduced by the amount of the charge.
  • In DB schemes the member’s pension rights are reduced actuarially.
Pensions in payment can also be reduced actuarially to pay the charge but GMP benefits cannot be reduced so in some cases the scheme may not be able to meet the liability.

 

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