Been researching this question for a few weeks. The answer still isn't clear, my accountant doesn't know or is unwilling to say, Google is getting sick of me asking and a search in this forum only hints at the truth.
Like most of you, I run a Ltd company and pay myself a low salary of about 10k plus large dividends. My dividends exceed the HR threshold , so I pay higher rate tax of effectively 25% on the portion of dividend cash exceeding the threshold. Nothing too shocking there.
I have an existing personal pension that I would like to pay into and reclaim tax, hopefully that 25% I paid on some dividends. However:
- My low salary was not actually taxed. Nothing to reclaim there.
- Dividend income is not deemed a "qualifying income" for pensions. Not only can I not reclaim the tax, I cannot legally put ANY of the divi cash into the pension . My accountant confirms this, and has also said the complete opposite. The links below seem to confirm it, slightly.
Is this right ? The following link is close but not quite relevant. NB I am aware of pension payments directly from the company and will probably switch to that mechanism eventually, but I would like to understand this little chestnut first. Also, before the forum heavyweights give me brusque advice to change my accountant, yes that also is on my bucket list.
Contractoruk answers a slighyl different question:
http://forums.contractoruk.com/accou...ividend-3.html
Google says no, yes, kinda:
http://www.taxation.co.uk/taxation/A...ension-problem
Google says no: (5th paragraph 2st sentence "Dividend income cannot support pension payments."):
Dividends versus Salary
Like most of you, I run a Ltd company and pay myself a low salary of about 10k plus large dividends. My dividends exceed the HR threshold , so I pay higher rate tax of effectively 25% on the portion of dividend cash exceeding the threshold. Nothing too shocking there.
I have an existing personal pension that I would like to pay into and reclaim tax, hopefully that 25% I paid on some dividends. However:
- My low salary was not actually taxed. Nothing to reclaim there.
- Dividend income is not deemed a "qualifying income" for pensions. Not only can I not reclaim the tax, I cannot legally put ANY of the divi cash into the pension . My accountant confirms this, and has also said the complete opposite. The links below seem to confirm it, slightly.
Is this right ? The following link is close but not quite relevant. NB I am aware of pension payments directly from the company and will probably switch to that mechanism eventually, but I would like to understand this little chestnut first. Also, before the forum heavyweights give me brusque advice to change my accountant, yes that also is on my bucket list.
Contractoruk answers a slighyl different question:
http://forums.contractoruk.com/accou...ividend-3.html
Google says no, yes, kinda:
http://www.taxation.co.uk/taxation/A...ension-problem
Google says no: (5th paragraph 2st sentence "Dividend income cannot support pension payments."):
Dividends versus Salary
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