• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Saving for pension - any regrets?

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Originally posted by coxy View Post
    I’m 45 with a pathetic 32k pension in a SIPP currently. 7 years off paying off mortgage on a nice house (maybe worth ~£420k) Been contracting last 14 years with a mix of some good rates and some not great. My wife is a low earner so I have not really been in a situation to put much into a pension with 3 kids, basic holidays most years and no fancy cars. I’m now putting in £20k but know this isn’t enough but it’s all I can afford with helping my kids go through Uni and just basic living costs. I regret not starting much younger but don’t regret a reasonable lifestyle for the majority of my kids young lives. I’ll be working well into 60s which worries me in the competitive software market, but don’t really have any other choice. I made my bed….
    This does not compute at all. Basic holidays, no fancy cars yet you've had to spend everything you've earned as a contractor? Don't believe that. Is your perception of what basic and fancy is a bit different to most? So you've been living beyond your means for 14 years and now you are in a world of trouble? What are you doing for a warchest? You been working for 14 years hand to mouth and been gambling you'll get your next gig or do you have something in the LTD to cover you? You are gonna need that now more than ever before you starting thinking about pensions and savings.
    'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

    Comment


      Speaking of pensions and in particular pension pots consolidation, has any of you used Pension bee for consolidation purposes?

      Comment


        Originally posted by coxy View Post
        I’m 45 with a pathetic 32k pension in a SIPP currently. 7 years off paying off mortgage on a nice house (maybe worth ~£420k) Been contracting last 14 years with a mix of some good rates and some not great. My wife is a low earner so I have not really been in a situation to put much into a pension with 3 kids, basic holidays most years and no fancy cars. I’m now putting in £20k but know this isn’t enough but it’s all I can afford with helping my kids go through Uni and just basic living costs. I regret not starting much younger but don’t regret a reasonable lifestyle for the majority of my kids young lives. I’ll be working well into 60s which worries me in the competitive software market, but don’t really have any other choice. I made my bed….
        It is not all gloom and doom.

        15 years from now, your house could easily be worth over 600K free and clear, and your pension pot could grow, if you keep adding 20K to it every year, to over 400K.

        So you could easily retire at 60 with a net worth over £1 Million.

        Make sure your wife continues to work as well, even minimum wage is 20K a year these days. With very little tax on that. That will be more than 250K of after tax income over the next 15 years. Probably more as the minimum wage tends go up nicely every year, pushing up all wages at the lower end. While IT rates often stay flat.
        Last edited by Fraidycat; 22 August 2022, 09:51.

        Comment


          Originally posted by Fraidycat View Post

          It is not all gloom and doom.

          15 years from now, your house could easily be worth over 600K free and clear, and your pension pot could grow, if you keep adding 20K to it every year, to over 400K.

          So you could easily retire at 60 with a net worth over £1 Million.

          Make sure your wife continues to work as well, even minimum wage is 20K a year these days. With very little tax on that. That will be more than 250K of after tax income over the next 15 years. Probably more as the minimum wage tends go up nicely every year, pushing up all wages at the lower end. While IT rates often stay flat.
          That’s the plan, I’m making up for lost time. Just have to stay marketable as I grow old. I’m guessing the average contractor age is increasing so won’t be alone.

          Comment


            also you may win the lottery, you never know

            Comment


              Originally posted by PCTNN View Post
              also you may win the lottery, you never know
              That's my plan!

              Comment


                Originally posted by coxy View Post

                That’s the plan, I’m making up for lost time. Just have to stay marketable as I grow old. I’m guessing the average contractor age is increasing so won’t be alone.
                That is a pretty wild guess and I'd disagree. Up to a point maybe but not beyond a certain threshold. It will go down markedly as people take their foot of the peddle and enjoy the money they've been working to earn.
                'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

                Comment


                  Originally posted by coxy View Post

                  That’s the plan, I’m making up for lost time. Just have to stay marketable as I grow old. I’m guessing the average contractor age is increasing so won’t be alone.
                  Trying to stay marketable as you grow old is like trying to compete at a beauty contest when you're old and haggard.


                  Comment


                    Originally posted by coxy View Post

                    That’s the plan, I’m making up for lost time. Just have to stay marketable as I grow old.
                    Or you find a cushy permanent job for the last say 10 years of your career in a company that makes good employer contributions, especially if your mortgage is paid off and you don't have crazy expenses. This way you beef up your pensions and don't have to stay competitive.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by PCTNN View Post

                      Or you find a cushy permanent job for the last say 10 years of your career in a company that makes good employer contributions, especially if your mortgage is paid off and you don't have crazy expenses. This way you beef up your pensions and don't have to stay competitive.
                      I'd say he doesn't have that option open right now. He takes this gig at 52 when he's paid his mortgage off and then goes perm he's going to take a marked drop in income for a start. Lets say he get's a 70k job. Even at 8% self and 10% employer that's only going to be £660 a month. For 10 years that's still only going to be 76K. Total pension would be just over 100k. That's a pension pot of about 4k a year.

                      There is no option easy option for him despite the above and what NoBrain and Fraidy are trying to say. Pension investment is only going to be part of his income which is fixed so if he wants more pension he's gonna have to sacrifice something else. Putting the money he isn't paying as his mortgage is going to help for sure but he's got some serious thinking and life changes to make to catch up a lifetime of living beyond his means.
                      'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X