Less than a third of us understand how our pensions are topped up by the tax system.
Research by Hargreaves Lansdown found that fewer than a third, just 31 per cent, of people could identify the purpose of pension tax relief.
âPension tax relief is a major incentive to get people saving for retirement and yet the majority of people donât know what it is,â says Helen Morrissey, head of retirement analysis at Hargreaves Lansdown.
âWe need to raise awareness of this hidden hero of pensions to help people make the most of their retirement saving and save them from any nasty surprises.â
What does âreliefâ mean and what money do I get?
When you pay money into your pension, some of the income tax that would otherwise have gone to the Treasury is redirected into your pension instead.
For a basic-rate taxpayer, earning ÂŁ100 normally means ÂŁ20 going in income tax and ÂŁ80 lands in your bank account. If you put that ÂŁ80 into your pension, the Treasury adds the missing ÂŁ20, taking the total contribution back up to ÂŁ100.
The effect is that your pension gets a boost before the money is even invested.
âI think itâs possibly the word âreliefâ causing the understanding issue â itâs quite vague,â says Becky OâConnor, director of public affairs for PensionBee, suggesting something more specific like âtax-free pension contributionâ would be clearer.
âWhatever itâs called, itâs vital to grasp it because if you donât, you canât truly understand the magic of pensions and why they are so brilliant for long term saving.â
How does my tax band affect my pension savings?
How much income tax you pay affects how much money you get back from the Government when you contribute to your pension.
Basic-rate taxpayers pay 20% income tax, so to add ÂŁ100 to their pension they need to pay in ÂŁ80 with the government adding the remaining ÂŁ20.
Higher-rate taxpayers pay 40% income tax, so a ÂŁ100 pension contribution costs them ÂŁ60, with the government adding ÂŁ40.
Additional rate taxpayers pay 45% income tax, meaning a ÂŁ100 contribution costs them ÂŁ55, with ÂŁ45 coming from the government.
Thereâs a limit
There is a limit on how much of this tax top-up you can receive each year.
Pension contributions qualify up to an annual allowance of ÂŁ60,000, or 100 per cent of your earnings if you earn less than that. Very high earners may also face a lower allowance.
âYou can even use a process called âcarry forwardâ to boost your contribution by making use of any unused annual allowances from the previous three tax years,â says Morrissey.
âItâs an enormously tax efficient way to make the most of your long-term saving.â
You donât need to earn to claim
Additionally, you can benefit from this system even if you arenât earning or paying income tax.
If you have a Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) you can still pay in up to ÂŁ2,880 a year and the government will top it up to ÂŁ3,600.
âParents and grandparents can help give their children and grandchildren a pension head start by saving on their behalf,â says James Scott-Hopkins, founder of financial planning firm EXE Capital Management.
Children can have SIPPs, and the government will add up to ÂŁ720 a year too. If an adult pays in ÂŁ2,880 a year every year from birth until 18, they will give the child ÂŁ64,800 but with tax relief the government would have added a further ÂŁ12,960.
Pension tax refunds arenât always automatic
One of the key things higher and additional rate taxpayers need to understand is that the extra tax refunds they are entitled to is not always applied automatically.
Basic rate income tax is usually added to your pension without you having to do anything. Pay in ÂŁ80 and ÂŁ20 will appear in your account from HMRC.
However, higher and additional rate taxpayers usually need to take action to receive the extra tax back they are due, often via a tax return.
Because people donât understand how the system works âit routinely goes unclaimed,â says Antonia Medlicott, the founder of Investing Insiders.
There are exceptions, though. If your pension contributions are taken from your salary before tax is calculated the full tax refund is applied automatically.
With the tax return deadline looming at the end of January, higher and additional rate taxpayers should check how the extra tax refunds are applied to their pensions.
âIf you do not claim it, it does not arrive later by magic. It is simply lost,â says Medlicott.
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