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Your total outstanding loans are £100,000, and your other income in 2018/19 is £50,000.
You can contribute up to £150,000 to your pension, but you only need to contribute £138,150
(£150,000 - £11,850) to reduce tax to zero.
This is the gross figure. For a personal pension, you would pay in £110,520, and the pension
provider would reclaim the basic rate tax of £27,630 from HMRC.
You would have to pay £27,630 through self-assessment but, as the pension provider had already
reclaimed this, the net position is you would not pay any tax at all.
In contrast, without the pension contibutions, your tax bill would have been £53,100.
Instead of paying a £53,000 tax bill to HMRC - you pay £110,520 into a pension and £27,650 to HMRC? Leaving your pension pot (and total outlay) at £138,150?
Instead of paying a £53,000 tax bill to HMRC - you pay £110,520 into a pension and £27,650 to HMRC? Leaving your pension pot (and total outlay) at £138,150?
It's only really for people with closed years because it doesn't stop the underlying enquiry that you have
are you sure.
Someone with open year could well opt for the loan charge, offset it (fully or partially) with a pension contribution, the full loan loan charge would still count as a down payment for the open years.
This is how I understand it although i am far from an expert.
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