The 3 Big Pension Mistakes EVERY Retiree Makes (Real world examples)

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2023-10-02に共有
Taking tax-free cash is not tax-free if it means you have to pay more tax in the future!

Financial Planning
I am a Chartered Wealth Manager and Partner in a financial planning practice based in the UK. If you would like to find out more about our services, please follow this link: go.novawm.com/getintouch


DISCLAIMER:
This channel is for education purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Any opinions or assessments expressed are James’ own opinions or assessments, which are not affiliated with any third party. Any representations stated as facts or views based on such facts are relevant to circumstances applicable at the time of publication. This information should never be relied solely upon to make decisions, and James accepts no liability for any investment actions undertaken by viewers. Please seek regulated financial advice or an advisor if you require assistance. The value of an investment and the income from it can go down as well as up and investors may not get back the amount invested.


00:00 Intro
01:06 Tax-Free Cash
07:05 Defined Benefit Pension
09:59 Asset Splits

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コメント (21)
  • I would like to see more videos about pensions for low earners who will be getting very modest amounts of money.
  • Thank you James. Superbly and clearly relayed to your audience. Over the last 14 minutes, the duration of your most helpful video, I've learnt more about how pensions and tax work than I've ever learnt reading through the bumf I was provided to myself pre-retirement age. Now retired, but still well worth learning this stuff for my children, and their children too. Just subscribed to your channel fella for the sake of future proofing my family lines pensions, so again James, a big thank you to you.
  • @Neklank
    I must be the rare person that still found the video complex. Pensions are an absolute minefield, well finance in general for me. Perhaps I need to play it back a few times to wrap my head round it :)
  • This is the first time these options have been explained in a manner I can easily understand. Great video
  • @pablob618
    Hi James, another great video, thanks a lot!! Your examples are great to understand the tax implications and how to maximised your income at retirement minimising the tax impact. Many of your viewers are probably considering retirement outside the UK, as I do. Although you will not be able to cover every possible country, it would be great if you could explain which tax implications we should look into if we decide to retire in a EU country, from the UK tax point of view, and which tax factors we should be looking into the country where we want to retire. Thanks!
  • @M896
    I need to keep looping back to this every few weeks, makes my head spin!
  • You are the second advisor I have heard saying that if you leave your cash free sum or part of it in your pension fund it grows tax free. In practice it does not. The purpose of a pension fund is to provide you with a future income with a side issue involving inheritance tax. For most people, the state pension will use up all their personal allowance so as soon as you draw from it you will pay tax so we are talking about a deferral of tax rather than exemption from it. This may not be an issue but before deciding not to withdraw any tax free cash it is important to consider other options that could be available such as unused ISA allowances, debts that could be repaid and using the increasingly small tax free dividend allowance. Others have pointed out that the tax free element is not guratanteed to be available in the future and additionally, future tax rates are not guaranteed.
  • This video really really addresses those most who are high rate taxpayers. The real problem will be if the State Pension continues to rise annually (for new recipients, it's now over £10K from April 2024), while at the same time the Personal Income Tax Allowance has been frozen at £12570 between 2021 and 2027. At this rate, the gap between the two will disappear to a point where you could end up paying Income Tax on the basic State Pension by 2027. The key here is to keep your taxable income (in total, including State Pension) to below the 40% tax threshold (just over £50K a year) per person, which would suffice for most people here. The large savings shown here as regards tax savings aren't really applicable to people with pension pots worth under £200K and paying Income Tax at the 20% rate, which is around 85% plusof the population currently working who don't pay higher rate Income Tax. The key is to keep your yearly income well below the £50K mark and not attract higher rate tax.
  • @ostosix
    This says to me, get all the good stuff done while working and change to a more sedate, low cost life style in retirement
  • I love your videos - I think I’m reasonably knowledgeable (for the average person!) on personal finance but you really demonstrate in each and every video both something new and the benefit of getting a real dedicated professional involved.
  • @wgj4813
    This is a good video and it makes you think how you should plan your pension contributions and drawdown between partners to limit the amount of tax. If one partner is unlikely to cross the tax threshold to 20 % in retirement then invest in a pension for that partner and get the 20% tax free allowance. No mention is made of Isa,s you may have paid tax on the sum invested but after that its tax free.
  • @3004andy
    Great content and clearly presented, thank you! This has been a help in fine tuning our retirement plans.
  • this is a brilliant video, i have never seen anyone talk about being tax efficient in retirement, well done!
  • Just had this video recommended by the algorithm. I would like to think I'm pretty financially literate (paid off my mortgage early and made large pension contributions when times were good), but I definitely learned some new and useful stuff from you. Subscribed immediately, and I look forward to exploring your past videos as well 👍
  • Interesting discussion, but not the only way to look at it. The starting premise that I agree with is that it is never a good plan to draw income to the extent that you pay higher rate tax on it. My intention is however to only use regular income to pay basic bills like food, heating, petrol etc. and on that footing £30-35k pa before tax should be enough. Anything fancier, like the long haul flights mentioned in the video, get funded by carefully controlled capital drawdowns from my ISAs.
  • Really excellent video!!...if only more people were aware of these pitfalls...it also demonstrates how incredibly difficult it is for the average person to manage their pension in a tax effective way by themselves.
  • I did mine differently. I took the entire lump sum from my defined benefit pension and bought a property outright with it. I then use the rent from my property to supplement my state and private pension. I am immune to any hike on mortgage interests because I do not have a mortgage. I'm not bothered if my property does not increase its value much. In view of the chronic housing shortage in the UK, there is a good chance that my property will increase in value. It's a win win situation for me.
  • @clivedyer17
    It’s one thing knowing that stuff but delivering it in a logical and understandable order is very impressive
  • @JamesShack
    If taking tax free cash from your pension causes you to have to pay more tax in the future…it’s not tax free!