Originally posted by Paralytic
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Reply to: New to SIPP, some questions
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Previously on "New to SIPP, some questions"
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Originally posted by lucyclarityumbrella View PostIn simple terms - paying into a pension via salary sacrifice will reduce all tax and NI contributions
NLUK: annoying as you can be, appreciate your help.Last edited by win10; 17 November 2020, 12:58.
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Originally posted by win10 View PostI am confused here. How is this salary sacrifice different to an umbrella that dont do it?
E.g I get my net pay (gross - tax nad 2xNICs) of £100 and I put this £100 into SIPP. I still £25 from the government i.e. tax back. I loose the NICs.
You described the same above.
Is putting in SIPP via salary sacrifice a way to NOT pay NICs?
https://www.contractoruk.com/forums/...mbrella-2.html
There are plenty more if you use the google search method to search the forums or just google for articles.
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Originally posted by eek View PostNope Salary Sacrifice =100% of the money received. So £100 from the pre tax "agency umbrella rate" (i.e the money the agency pays your umbrella for the work you did) goes into your pension.
From paid income you can reclaim the income tax paid but not the NIC part so for every £100 - you would receive £55 of it after tax in your bank account. If you then paid that £55 into your pension the income tax refund will take it up to £75 or so.
So Salary Sacrifice will put £25 (or 1/3 depending on how you calculate) more into your pension with less work by you - all it requires is picking a good umbrella company.
E.g I get my net pay (gross - tax nad 2xNICs) of £100 and I put this £100 into SIPP. I still £25 from the government i.e. tax back. I loose the NICs.
You described the same above.
Is putting in SIPP via salary sacrifice a way to NOT pay NICs?
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Originally posted by win10 View PostThanks for the input. Did my reading and clear now.
However for future reference what is the situation with umbrella and SIPP?
If they want to contribute upto 40k, great.
But if they dont want can you contribute yourself from the post tax and NIC money and get the taxes back (at 40% - 20 via SIPP scheme and 20% via SATR)?
I guess in this way you loose the ~12% (or is is 25% NIC)?
If the umbrella wants to pay 40k into SIPP is this from the gross income i.e. you also save on NIC?
You join an umbrella that lets you put in to your SIPP and carry on as normal.
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Originally posted by win10 View PostIf they do it is this pre tax and NIC at 25%? So effective saving of ~45%?
From paid income you can reclaim the income tax paid but not the NIC part so for every £100 - you would receive £55 of it after tax in your bank account. If you then paid that £55 into your pension the income tax refund will take it up to £75 or so.
So Salary Sacrifice will put £25 (or 1/3 depending on how you calculate) more into your pension with less work by you - all it requires is picking a good umbrella company.Last edited by eek; 9 December 2020, 16:24.
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Originally posted by eek View PostIf an umbrella offers salary sacrifice you won't pay any tax on the money.
If they don't you will end up being able to claim the income tax proportion back but will lose 25% or so due to Employer and Employee NI.
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If an umbrella offers salary sacrifice you won't pay any tax on the money.
If they don't you will end up being able to claim the income tax proportion back but will lose 25% or so due to Employer and Employee NI.
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Thanks for the input. Did my reading and clear now.
However for future reference what is the situation with umbrella and SIPP?
If they want to contribute upto 40k, great.
But if they dont want can you contribute yourself from the post tax and NIC money and get the taxes back (at 40% - 20 via SIPP scheme and 20% via SATR)?
I guess in this way you loose the ~12% (or is is 25% NIC)?
If the umbrella wants to pay 40k into SIPP is this from the gross income i.e. you also save on NIC?
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Originally posted by win10 View PostQuestions:
If I have personal savings of 40k.
If I open a SIPP now and dont pay 40k from the company, but put my own saved 40k.
Can I do this at all or it must be up to 8k (my salary)?
And will I get any tax back? Mind I havent paid any tax when on 8k salary.
How does this work?
You really need to learn how to use google. Here's one randomly selected result when searching "how much can I pay into a SIPP"
Contributing to your pension | AJ Bell Youinvest
It even has a nice picture:
Last edited by Paralytic; 16 November 2020, 13:28.
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Originally posted by win10 View PostQuestions:
If I have personal savings of 40k.
If I open a SIPP now and dont pay 40k from the company, but put my own saved 40k.
Can I do this at all or it must be up to 8k (my salary)?
And will I get any tax back? Mind I havent paid any tax when on 8k salary.
How does this work?
Leave a comment:
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Questions:
If I have personal savings of 40k.
If I open a SIPP now and dont pay 40k from the company, but put my own saved 40k.
Can I do this at all or it must be up to 8k (my salary)?
And will I get any tax back? Mind I havent paid any tax when on 8k salary.
How does this work?
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Originally posted by win10 View PostAny more insight on the other questions will be appreciated.
Monevator — Make more money, invest profitably, retire early
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Originally posted by win10 View PostOther important thing. Are SIPP pots protected if the provider/investment fund went kaput? I have read they are by the state for up to £85k. This doesnt of course cover bad investment. Is that so?
Would I lose my pension if my investing platform goes bust? | This is Money
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