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- What is the pension Lifetime Allowance and when was it abolished?
The Lifetime Allowance was the maximum you could save in your pensions over your lifetime, without having to pay any extra tax charges when you took money out of them, ignoring any income from the State Pension.
However, the Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced in the Spring Budget 2023 that the allowance would be abolished in April 2024 to encourage pension savers to stay in the workplace longer.
Stephen Lowe, group communications director at retirement specialist Just Group, said: “The removal of the Lifetime Allowance releases people to save as much as they like but for many it will be irrelevant, as the Chancellor himself indicated the obvious winners are doctors in the defined benefit NHS pension scheme.”
If you’re considering seeking professional financial advice on the options available to you, we’ve partnered with nationwide independent advice firm Fidelius to offer Rest Less members a free initial consultation with a qualified financial advisor. There’s no obligation, however if the adviser feels you’d benefit from paid financial advice, they’ll talk you through how that works and the charges involved.
Fidelius are rated 4.7 out of 5 from over 1,500 reviews on VouchedFor, the review site for financial advisors.
What happened to the Lifetime Allowance?
The pensions Lifetime Allowance was abolished entirely from 6 April 2024. It was originally due to remain frozen at £1,073,100 until April 2026. However, the maximum pension tax-free cash lump sum that you can take has been capped at £268,275, or 25% of the old Lifetime Allowance and is now known as the Lump Sum Allowance (LSA). This means that even though it’s now possible to build a larger pot without incurring a tax charge, your tax-free cash lump sum won’t increase with it.
The LSA might sound an enormous amount – and of course by most people’s standards it is – but those who’ve saved into a pension over the course of several decades may find they end up with a 25% tax-free lump sum well in excess of this, especially if they’ve been lucky enough to belong to a final salary (or defined benefit) pension scheme. With this type of pension, you’ll receive a guaranteed income at retirement, which is usually based on how many years you’ve belonged to the scheme and a proportion of your final year’s pay.
Why was the Lifetime Allowance abolished?
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said that the Lifetime Allowance would be abolished in a bid to encourage pension savers to stay in work longer and pay into their pensions without worrying about additional tax charges. In particular, the move was aimed at encouraging NHS consultants and GPs with generous pensions back to work, or to remain in work for longer.
The Lifetime Allowance had previously been frozen to generate more revenue for HMRC. Keeping it at its current level until 2026 was expected to raise £990m for Treasury coffers through a process known as ‘fiscal drag’ – where the threshold no longer rises in line with increases in living costs and inflation.
However, there remains some uncertainty for pension savers, as Labour has pledged to reinstate the Lifetime Allowance if it gains power after the next general election. Critics claim that it provides wealthy pension savers additional shelter from Inheritance Tax (IHT) because money held in a pension is usually exempt from IHT. The abolishment of the allowance means that pensions may increasingly be used as a tax-efficient way for the well-off to pass wealth onto the next generation.
Get your free no-obligation pension consultation
If you’re considering getting professional financial advice, Fidelius is offering Rest Less members a free pension consultation. It’s a chance to have an independent financial advisor give an unbiased assessment of your retirement savings. Fidelius is rated 4.7/5 from over 1,500 reviews on VouchedFor. Capital at risk.
What happens if my pension savings previously exceeded the Lifetime Allowance?
Unfortunately the rule change won’t help those who retired under the old LTA rules and paid a tax charge for breaching their allowance. If you applied for a protected Lifetime Allowance, you should still be able to take advantage of the benefits of this (read more about this below). You may want to seek professional financial advice if you’re unsure where you stand.
What were the charges if you exceeded the Lifetime Allowance?
Tax charges could amount to an eye-watering sum under the previous Lifetime Allowance rules. Any amount over your Lifetime Allowance taken as a lump sum, for example, would have been taxed at a flat rate of 55%, whereas if you’d made cash withdrawals via drawdown or received the money as regular pension payments, instead of the flat rate of 55%, you’ll have been taxed an additional 25% on top of any regular income tax payable on your pension income.
Let’s take, for example, the Lifetime Allowance in the 2022/23 tax year. If you’d wanted to crystallise your pension and take a £10,000 lump sum from it, and it had a value of £1,083,100, tax would have been applied to the £10,000 which is in excess of the £1,073,100 Lifetime Allowance. If you took the £10,000 as a lump sum you’d have paid £5,500 tax (55%), but if you’d taken it as income through drawdown or an annuity you’d pay £2,500 (25%), plus income tax.
While the Lifetime Allowance no longer applies, there are various other pension allowances you need to get to grips with. These include the pensions Annual Allowance, where most of us can pay up to a maximum of £60,000 a year into our defined contribution pensions. However, once you’ve started taking money out of your pension, this Annual Allowance falls from £60,000 to £10,000 in 2023/24 and becomes known as the Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA). You will still receive tax relief on any new top up savings up to the £10,000 limit in the 2023/24 tax year. You can learn more about how the various pension allowances work in our article Understanding your pension allowances.
What are the new pension allowances?
There were some important announcements about the changes to the Lifetime Allowance in the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement. Two new allowances will come into force when the LTA is abolished – the Lump Sum Allowance (LSA) and the Lump Sum and Death Benefits Allowance (LSDBA).
Lump Sum Allowance
The Lump Sum Allowance is set at £268,275, or a quarter of the current £1,073,100 LTA. This is the maximum you can take as a tax-free lump sum from your defined contribution pension from age 55 (unless you have protected your allowance, which you can read about below).
Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance
The Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance is a combined allowance that will be used to determine how much can be paid as a tax free lump sum during your lifetime and on your death. The total allowance amounts to the current LTA, at £1,073,100. There are a number of lump sums that will be tested against this allowance, including: defined benefit death benefits, pension and annuity protection lump sum death benefits, drawdown pension fund lump sum death benefits and flexi-access drawdown lump sum death benefits.
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What if I protected my pension Lifetime Allowance?
If you had pension savings above the Lifetime Allowance in previous tax years, you may have applied for protection to avoid a large tax bill. The government’s scrapping of the Lifetime Allowance originally seemed to suggest that pension savers risked losing their protected higher tax-free cash lump sum. However, provided the protection was registered for before 15 March 2023, savers will be allowed to keep their higher tax-free cash protection and, in some cases (depending which protection they have) pay more into their pension pot.
Protections were originally designed in recognition that many people would have saved into their pension pots expecting a much higher allowance.
Over the years there have been a number of different types of protection which continue to function for anyone that holds them:
Individual protection 2016
If you had over £1m in your pension savings on 5 April 2016, you may have been eligible for Individual protection which will provide you with a Lifetime Allowance protection of £1.25 million or the value of your pension savings at 5 April 2016 (whichever was lower). You are able to continue paying into your pension if you wish above your protected Lifetime Allowance.
Fixed protection 2016
You could apply for fixed protection 2016 if you or your employer had not added to your pension savings since 5 April 2016 or if you’d opted out of any workplace schemes by 5 April 2016. Fixed protection effectively fixed your Lifetime Allowance at £1.25 million, but you were no longer able to contribute to your pension.
If you have fixed protection that keeps your Lifetime Allowance at a particular level, you may be considering starting to make contributions again. However, this isn’t necessarily a simple decision. If you made further contributions in the 2022/23 tax year, you would lose your fixed protection, which entitles you to withdraw a tax-free lump sum of 25% of the greater amount. That will be higher than the amount of tax-free cash you can draw from 6 April, when it will be capped at £268,275. In the 2023/24 tax year, however, you can make further contributions without losing your entitlement to the higher value tax-free lump sum.
Where to get help
If you’re concerned about how to manage your pension allowances, you might want to get advice from a qualified financial adviser. It can be a complex area however, where it will almost certainly pay to get tailored professional advice for your personal circumstances in order to avoid falling foul of the rules and facing tax charges.
If you’re 50 or over and have a defined contribution pension, you can get free guidance on the options available to you from the Government’s Pension Wise service. You may also want to get in touch with the Pensions Advisory Service.
However, if you want personal recommendations or advice about your specific circumstances, you’ll need to seek professional financial advice. You can find a local financial advisor on VouchedFor or Unbiased, or for more information, check out our guides on How to find the right financial advisor for you or How to get advice on your pension.
If you’re considering seeking professional financial advice on the options available to you, we’ve partnered with nationwide independent advice firm Fidelius to offer Rest Less members a free initial consultation with a qualified financial advisor. There’s no obligation, however if the adviser feels you’d benefit from paid financial advice, they’ll talk you through how that works and the charges involved.
Fidelius are rated 4.7 out of 5 from over 1,500 reviews on VouchedFor, the review site for financial advisors.
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Melanie Wright is money editor at Rest Less. An award-winning financial journalist, she has written about personal finance for the past 25 years, and specialises in mortgages, savings and pensions. She is a former Deputy Editor of The Daily Telegraph's Your Money section, wrote the Sunday Mirror’s Money section for over a decade, and has been interviewed on BBC Breakfast, Good Morning Britain, ITN News, and Channel Five News. Melanie lives in Kent with her husband, two sons and their dog. She spends most of her spare time driving her children to social engagements or watching them play sport in the rain.
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Get your free no-obligation pension consultation
If you’re considering getting professional financial advice, Fidelius is offering Rest Less members a free pension consultation. It’s a chance to have an independent financial advisor give an unbiased assessment of your retirement savings. Fidelius is rated 4.7/5 from over 1,500 reviews on VouchedFor. Capital at risk.