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How can I calculate my pension allowance this year?

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    How can I calculate my pension allowance this year?

    Hello mates,

    How can I calculate my pension allowance this year?

    Before ending the current tax year, I would like to move as much as I can to my SIPP from my limited company, as a director. (I will open a SIPP in a few days).
    The problem I have is that I am not sure about how to calculate the maximum amount of money I can send given all the rules we have.

    From:
    Tax relief on pension contributions - Money Advice Service
    I read:
    "If you’re a UK taxpayer, in the tax year 2018-19 the standard rule is that you’ll get tax relief on pension contributions of up to 100% of your earnings or a £40,000 annual allowance, whichever is lower."
    and
    "However, you can carry forward unused allowances from the previous three years, as long as you were a member of a pension scheme during those years."

    Moreover, here:
    Crunch |

    Can I make pension contributions through...

    "Your contributions can’t be excessive and higher than what other employers are paying their employees in similar roles. For example, a director can’t have pension contributions larger than company profits for a particular year."

    Are those rules the same when your Ltd contributes directly to the director pot?

    Because I started my workplace pension in February 2017, and since then I added £12,627.48, then I guess that I can use the last 3 years:

    Earnings April-2016/April-2017: About £55,000 as an employee
    Pension contribution: £500
    Remaining allowance: 40,000 - 500 = £39500

    Earnings April-2017/April-2018: About £55,000 as an employee
    Pension contribution: About £11,000
    Remaining allowance: 40,000 - 11,000 = £29,000

    Earnings April-2018/April-2019: About £18,000 as an employee (As a contractor, my salary was £0, and dividends cannot be used as earnings).
    Pension contribution: About £1,000
    Remaining allowance: 18,000 - 1,000 = £17,000 (here I use my earnings as a limit, not the 40,000 limit, because my earnings are less than 40,000)

    Total allowance using the "carry forward unused allowances" rule: £39,500 + £29,000 + £17,000 = £85,500

    So, does that mean I can move to my SIPP £85,500 right now without breaking any rule or any concern from HMRC? Are my calculations right?

    Or do I have to follow this rule "a director can’t have pension contributions larger than company profits for a particular year." which means that if I expect £120,000 in gross profits, then I could move to my pension only £60,000 and declare £60,000 in profits?

    I am a bit confused.
    Thanks a lot for your time and help.

    #2
    What did your accountant say?
    'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
      What did your accountant say?
      I sent him an email last night.
      I guess he will reply on Monday (or later).

      Comment


        #4
        here I use my earnings as a limit, not the 40,000 limit, because my earnings are less than 40,000

        The annual allowance is 40,000 a year, regardless of your earnings. So your annual allowance is roughly 107K (=85K+(40K-18K)). (There is a restriction on annual allowance if your earnings are over 150K, am assuming that doesn't apply. Also, if you have taken money out of a pension, the amount you can contribute may be restricted.)

        In a particular year, you cannot get get tax relief on a personal contribution of more than your earnings, but that restriction does not apply to employer contributions. This rule is a separate thing to the annual allowance. It may override the total annual allowance, as in if you wanted to make a personal contribution this year, your annual allowance is 107K but you could actually only get tax relief on 18K of personal contributions.

        However your earnings (salary) is irrelevant because as a contractor you should be making an employer contribution, not a personal one. Your limit for an employer contribution is 107K.

        Crunch's statement makes no sense, because you absolutely can reduce your profits to zero by increasing your remuneration, and it's none of HMRC's business how your remuneration is split between salary and pension. I guess what they were trying to say is that you shouldn't pay more than your turnover into a pension. The rule-of-thumb that I learned a decade or so ago when I investigated the possibility of corporation tax relief being disallowed on excessive contributions is that if you've personally brought in all the companies income, then a contribution cannot be excessive. (If you paid a large contribution to your spouse/company secretary, that's when you might have to worry whether it would be regarded as excessive.)

        I have in the past paid a contribution large enough to cause my company to make a loss in the year it was paid. (Crunch were my accountant at the time.)
        Last edited by IR35 Avoider; 30 December 2018, 14:04.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by IR35 Avoider View Post
          here I use my earnings as a limit, not the 40,000 limit, because my earnings are less than 40,000

          The annual allowance is 40,000 a year, regardless of your earnings. So your annual allowance is roughly 107K (=85K+(40K-18K)). (There is a restriction on annual allowance if your earnings are over 150K, am assuming that doesn't apply. Also, if you have taken money out of a pension, the amount you can contribute may be restricted.)

          In a particular year, you cannot get get tax relief on a personal contribution of more than your earnings, but that restriction does not apply to employer contributions. This rule is a separate thing to the annual allowance. It may override the total annual allowance, as in if you wanted to make a personal contribution this year, your annual allowance is 107K but you could actually only get tax relief on 18K of personal contributions.

          However your earnings (salary) is irrelevant because as a contractor you should be making an employer contribution, not a personal one. Your limit for an employer contribution is 107K.

          Crunch's statement makes no sense, because you absolutely can reduce your profits to zero by increasing your remuneration, and it's none of HMRC's business how your remuneration is split between salary and pension. I guess what they were trying to say is that you shouldn't pay more than your turnover into a pension. The rule-of-thumb that I learned a decade or so ago when I investigated the possibility of corporation tax relief being disallowed on excessive contributions is that if you've personally brought in all the companies income, then a contribution cannot be excessive. (If you paid a large contribution to your spouse/company secretary, that's when you might have to worry whether it would be regarded as excessive.)

          I have in the past paid a contribution large enough to cause my company to make a loss in the year it was paid. (Crunch were my accountant at the time.)
          Thanks a lot. I didn't know that the rules are different depending on if it is a personal contribution or an employer contribution.
          So, is it perfectly legal to send a 107K contribution from my LTD and declare £0 in profits? Sounds strange.

          EDIT: Wait a minute. Reading this:
          Contributing to a pension from your limited company | PensionBee
          I see the difference between personal contribution and employer contribution in 2 different sections.

          Same thing when reading the book "Tax optimisation strategies for your Limited Company", I see clearly these 2 types and their different rules:


          Checking that I understand I could transfer to my pension as much as I want, there is no tax relief (because I save it through the corporation tax I don't have to pay) and there are no limits, no 40,000 limit or anything related to 3 previous years rule.

          There is only one rule related to 150K, but because my company turnover is slightly less than 150K, I don't have to worry.

          Does this mean I can transfer all my profits (something like 100K or 120K) to my pension and declare £0 as profits and I don't have to pay corporation tax? Is this perfectly legal? Again, it sounds strange to me.
          Thanks a lot for suggestions.
          Last edited by Ricardo19ip; 30 December 2018, 16:39.

          Comment


            #6
            The 40K limit is for all contributions - employer and employee

            See here

            The Annual Allowance - The Pensions Advisory Service

            "The annual allowance applies across all of the schemes you belong to, it’s not a ‘per scheme’ limit and includes all of the contributions that you or your employer pay or anyone else who pays on your behalf."

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
              The 40K limit is for all contributions - employer and employee

              See here

              The Annual Allowance - The Pensions Advisory Service

              "The annual allowance applies across all of the schemes you belong to, it’s not a ‘per scheme’ limit and includes all of the contributions that you or your employer pay or anyone else who pays on your behalf."
              OK, Thanks a lot. It is a bit complex this topic.

              So, my allowance is just 40K*3 - 12K = about 108K, as IR35 Avoider said.
              That's good, more than enough.
              My only question is that if I move a large amount, like 80K or 100K, will HMRC complain about that or is there any other rule against that?

              Thanks a lot for suggestions.

              Comment


                #8
                There's no issue backdating your pension contribution so long as you have enough company profit/retained earnings to cover the £108K.

                If you do move loadsamoney i'd be wary of investing all of it right now e.g into funds and shares but rather drip it in. Otherwise if it crashes in the near future then buy buy buy.

                PS. I'm no financial advisor

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by SeededLoaf View Post
                  There's no issue backdating your pension contribution so long as you have enough company profit/retained earnings to cover the £108K.

                  If you do move loadsamoney i'd be wary of investing all of it right now e.g into funds and shares but rather drip it in. Otherwise if it crashes in the near future then buy buy buy.

                  PS. I'm no financial advisor
                  Actually, that was my plan

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I will just amend a very popular phase used on this forum to fit your situation...

                    Have you asked your financial advisor?

                    In all seriousness; I had a very similar situation, not fully understanding it all, thus got myself an IFA to help me

                    Comment

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