- This topic has 49 replies, 26 voices, and was last updated 8 years ago by mudshark.
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Pensions – Very confused!
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tailsFree Member
Hi, Does anyone know anything about pensions?
I set up a pension with Royal London at my last company, I paid about £50 and they matched it. I’ve now moved to a different company who do not currently have a pension set up. I called Royal London thinking I’ll just keep paying them until my employers sets one up but I’m not allowed to do this.
Are there any super easy to understand schemes in place that I can pay into or am I better to wait until my employer starts one?
Thanks
ahwilesFree MemberHi, Does anyone know anything about pensions?
all you need to know:
1) every month, flush a few hundred quid down the bog.
2) work till you die. Then work some more, you idle ****ing communist.
tailsFree MemberI think I need to start a SIPP, although I’m confused to say the least.
convertFull Memberwho do not currently have a pension set up
From /www.gov.uk/workplace-pensions:-
A new law means that every employer must automatically enrol workers into a workplace pension scheme if they:
are aged between 22 and State Pension age
earn more than £10,000 a year
work in the UK
This is called ‘automatic enrolment’.binnersFull MemberOther things you may need to know:
3) The person who sold you the pension has a much, much nicer car than you. And a holiday home in Provence.
Who’s paying for that then?*
* clue: see ahwiles point 1
traildogFree Member^^ what he said ^^ Although I think there needs to be 5 or more staff for the employee to provide a pension.
oldblokeFree MemberBut not all companies have reached the auto enrolment staging dates. Worth asking when your current employer’s staging date is as that’ll give you an idea how long you have to wait for their scheme to exist.
tailsFree Memberhaha! I’m very much of ahwiles thinking and that’s why I’m still renting at 31 and only just setting up pensions, ISAs etc.
My employer told me he’ll set it up in 2016, but he’s off work at the moment so I can’t press him about it.
augustuswindsockFull MemberA colleague’s just retired six years earlier than planned because he paid into a pension and invested a bit each month into Isa’s, when things started turning a bit cack at work he was in the enviable position of being able to just give them the V’s and he now spends all day on his bike, I’m no financial advisor, but there’s tax breaks for putting money into pensions and if your company’s paying money in too, then that’s free money (sort of)! Afaik it’s not a good idea to take money from one pension and move into another when you leave an employer, I’ve had 3 companies I’ve worked for and three different pension pots (actually 4, cos I took out a stakeholder pension when they came out about 16 yrs ago). If I was you, I’d leave the old pension alone and take out a new one, the stakeholder pension was quite good because of the tax relief, I paid in £230 a month and tax relief took it up to £300 and you could have one alongside any company pension. Get some advice from someone who knows what they’re talking about tho’, don’t rely on advice from a mountain bike website forum!!
brooessFree MemberDon’t ask for financial advice on STW, ask a financial adviser!
We have a pensions, debt and housing crisis in the UK which is going to leave quite a few people in really serious trouble when they retire because they
a) bought more shiny stuff than they had enough salary to buy
b) paid more for their house than was sensible
c) decided a and b were more important than not starving when retired and spent all their cash when young and have put nothing aside for retirement…Humans are like this, they tend to try and avoid short term loss even if it means long term gain.
Get some financial advice and get paying into a pension, it’s way more important than shiny things today. You get 20% of your contribution added in as tax relief straight off, let alone any long term investment gain. A mix of asset classes is normally sensible and for God’s sake don’t get into Buy To Let unless you want to lose the lot…
cheekygetFree MemberMy wife works in pensions……and if you want it in lay end terms
Unless your in a final salary scheme …..then your better off putting your money in a savings account..why
Because when you do evently draw your pension …you get taxed on it…….
mudsharkFree MemberPensions don’t need to be taxing… SIPPs are simple enough
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/investor/11470633/Telegraph-Investor-SIPPs-overview.html
I’m with II, was with HL, no-one’s making much money out of me.
coreFull MemberHardly any final salary schemes now, I work for local authority, still perhaps one of the best out there, it’s career average now though.
Only enroled 2 yrs ago, when I moved up from being a trainee, but doubt there’s another 5 years in the job. God knows what 7 years worth of LA pension at circa £30k average will be worth in 40 years time?!? 😕
suburbanreubenFree MemberGod knows what 7 years worth of LA pension at circa £30k average will be worth in 40 years time?!?
More than the remaining 23 years put together!
footflapsFull MemberBecause when you do evently draw your pension …you get taxed on it…….
Which is fine as your contributions aren’t, so you only get taxed once. If you pay into an ISA the money comes from net pay, so you’ve already been taxed on it.
allthepiesFree MemberUnless your in a final salary scheme …..then your better off putting your money in a savings account..why
Because when you do evently draw your pension …you get taxed on it…….
Bad advice 🙂
mudsharkFree Memberyour better off putting your money in a savings account..why
Because when you do evently draw your pension …you get taxed on it…….
You’ll get taxed on savings a/c interest too though.
SIPPs for the win!
footflapsFull MemberYou’ll get taxed on savings a/c interest too though
Unless it’s in an ISA….
jonbaFree MemberFor now I would just save in an ISA if they are going to start a pension scheme.
If they do start one there is a good chance it will be a good investment. As your previous one, they matched your contribution. That is a far better return that you would find in an investment or savings account!
https://www.moneyadviceservice.org.uk/en/categories/pensions-and-retirement
http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/savings/?tab=sect29
Might be worthwhile links
tailsFree MemberThanks for the advice, think I’m going to go for Virgins SIPP, until my company offer a pension then perhaps change.
Do I have to get my employer to pay into the SIPP at the point I get my salary to get the tax relief as otherwise I’ve already paid income tax?
I’m going to start a help to buy ISA in December as it suits me better than the current offerings.
Cheers
ScottCheggFree MemberNever ask for pension advice on here, because you get the same old claptrap regurgitated as advice like
1) every month, flush a few hundred quid down the bog.
When a pension is simply a tax favourable saving scheme. How to make it work best for you takes some effort, but it isn’t that complicated.
Get proper advice. It’ll be worth it in the long run. My Pension pot is worth 4 times what I have contributed. How can that be a bad thing?
allthepiesFree MemberVirgin don’t sell a SIPP do they ? I can only see a Stakeholder pension offering.
broadbeanFree Member‘and for God’s sake don’t get into Buy To Let unless you want to lose the lot…’
explain please.
mudsharkFree MemberNever ask for pension advice on here, because you get the same old claptrap regurgitated as advice like
Well you get some good advice!
Do I have to get my employer to pay into the SIPP at the point I get my salary to get the tax relief as otherwise I’ve already paid income tax?
Your SIPP provider will claim the lower rate tax and add it to your SIPP – takes a few weeks. Higher rate tax payers can claim the rest on the their tax return.
pebblebeachFree Member‘and for God’s sake don’t get into Buy To Let unless you want to lose the lot…’
explain please.
Expect the usual answer of govt going to kill anyone with buy to let properties, etc. Same old shite people have been spouting for years. As a sole source of future income then BTL isn’t the way to go but as part of an investment portfolio then it does work well.
I have 3 BTL’s around the country that make a good monthly return, the profit from them goes into my pension pot – win, win.
broadbeanFree Memberi assumed that the statement was in relation to having BtL’s rather than a pension. i too have BtL’s, but these are to supplement my pension (or other investments, for that matter).
brooessFree Member‘and for God’s sake don’t get into Buy To Let unless you want to lose the lot…’
explain please
It means putting all your investment into a single asset class (very, very bad investment practice) one which in the UK and globally has a repeat pattern of boom and bust. UK market is currently hugely distorted beyond all historical measures of value (esp wages) by massive foreign inflows, excessive speculation by inexperienced investors and emergency low interest rates leading to excessive lending.
All these factors will change at some point over the term of your investment. That UK government are after every source of tax they can get to pay off our monstrous debt is only one factor to consider…Fashionable ‘get rich quick’ schemes never work long term – this quick history is well worth a read:
A balanced portfolio of numerous asset classes which you can invest in with low fees is boring as hell but much less exposed to risk and changes in government policy
e.g. a combination of cash, gilts, bonds, equities (low-cost index tracker generally produce a better return than managed funds). Wrap the lot in a pension and you get the tax benefits too.mudsharkFree MemberBTL is made more risky if includes a mortgage – gearing means you could be wiped out with a fall in property prices. Thing is we are also likely to own our own property so adding BTL property to the value of our own means massive exposure to property prices. I have a fair chunk invested in unit trusts both in a SIPP and in ISAs but is smaller than the value of the house I live in. I can’t see me ever owning a BTL place – this is also partly as I think BTL is bad for society though.
ahwilesFree MemberScottChegg – Member
How can that be a bad thing?
our OP, ‘tails’ is 31.
he’ll be 70 before he can access his pension, if 40 years of sedentary desk jobs don’t kill him before then…
the idea of a long and happy retirement, playing golf, hooning around in classic cars, jetting off to Tuscan winter retreats, is a day-dream that will die with the baby-boomers.
(now that the ‘boomers’ have been
bribedallowed direct access to their pensions, we can expect the pension black-holes to open even wider, and btl investment hoover up all the remaining houses that aren’t already owned by ****ing landlords)it’s been a brilliant play though. The money being taken out now to buy flats and houses is the money being paid in by people who haven’t yet retired. The rest of us, decades from ‘retirement’ are the ones expected to put money into a scheme that will enable the boomers to finally and completely price us out of the property market. We’re paying for them to buy the houses on which they’ll charge us rent. It’s not enough to dry-bum us once, they have to do it twice.
ircFull MemberUnless your in a final salary scheme …..then your better off putting your money in a savings account..why
Because when you do evently draw your pension …you get taxed on it…..
Whereas in a savings scheme it’s taxed before it goes in.
mike_pFree MemberAll this thread shows is that most people know f-all about pensions. A pension is an undeniably good thing, if you take the time to understand it. It may seem complicated but it really isn’t – if your average IFA can figure it out then almost anyone can. So don’t bother dealing with an IFA, don’t listen to the moronic bleating of the nay-sayers on here, do a modicum of research and stick it in a low-cost SIPP.
ScottCheggFree MemberAgreed. But it’s easier to shout ‘bogeyman’ than find out what it actually means.
The rest of us, decades from ‘retirement’ are the ones expected to put money into a scheme that will enable the boomers to finally and completely price us out of the property market
What a load of self indulgent twaddle.
I’m decades from retirement, doesn’t mean I haven’t got a plan in place. Might be utopia; might not, but at least I’m taking responsibilty for my future rather than blaming everyone else, in advance.
mudsharkFree MemberThe current better off NI payers are paying for the older generation and it’s not unlikely they’ll not benefit themselves as there won’t be enough money in the pot by that time. So they need their own pensions to pay for their retirement or risk having to downsize their property or whatever – which might be a valid approach to retirement planning for some.
hammy7272Free MemberPensions are just a wrapper around an investment with massive tax uplifts. 20% overnight thanks very much. When you pay into a pension you are paying the future you, look after it.
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