TrueBlue1150
Registered User
- Messages
- 19
Hi Ashling,
I am 28 and have been paying into my pension since i moved back to Ireland last year. My employer currently pays 8% of my monthly salary into my pension pot(this includes any bonuses i may earn, my car allowance etc.) and i top up an additional 7% to utilise the 15% i can currently put into a pension given our age.
I am relatively new to pensions, and to be honest i still don't understand it fully. However, i currently see it that for every €1 i put in it only costs me around €0.58 due to tax relief. This is a great deal, i feel. I am a bit peeved if tax relief cuts back, but unltimately we are still getting money into the plan that is costing us nothing.
We aren't going to be retiring for a while, and things will change so much in that period of time that i wouldn't worry about it too much. Perhaps in future when more of our salary is being contributed then we could look into reducing contributins depending on the situation at that time, but i think we should be holding steady.....
Wasn't aware of this. What other euro countries have levied pensions? I *think* that they tried this in Latvia but had to reverse it as it was deemed to be unconstitutional..As for government levies, it happens all over Europe, so why should Ireland be any different?
Every year I put the amount I have saved on taxes as a result of my pension contributions into a retirement savings account, because this puts me up 20% on day one (our tax relief is not so high).
Wasn't aware of this. What other euro countries have levied pensions? I *think* that they tried this in Latvia but had to reverse it as it was deemed to be unconstitutional..
Being honest, I wouldn't be at all confident that pensions savings is the right thing when you only get 20% tax relief (as a general rule as opposed to for specific cases).
If you're getting 41% tax relief and your contributions are relatively modest the tax relief is a very good bonus even if you end up paying some tax on your retirement income.
If you're only getting 20% relief then the levy (if extended beyond the 4 years) would erode a large chunk of this, and you could easily end up paying tax on your retirement proceeds.
At 20% relief you'd want to be nearish retirement, be absolutely sure you wouldn't need access to your money before retirement and be confident that your retirement proceeds are modest enough not to pay income tax in retirement.
Maybe i am missing something however isn't a pension the only place you can invest gross income? Even if you only get 20% relief, you have a 20% return straight away.
Every form of saving will have some sort of tax on exit and who know in 25/30 years what the levels of income, CGT, DIRT tax will be...
Remember the objective.... collect as much cash as possible, if I pass on the 20% and get taxed on the savings income (which I don't in the pension fund), what to I do then, invest in higher risk asset classes to try and regain what I passed on???
my pension should still amount to about 83% of my current salary pa not including my state pension.
Honestly the idea that people should get tax relief at 41% and then go on to pay no taxes on retirement, is crazy, no country could go on with the regime in the long term as people are beginning to learn
20% relief is actually an immediate 25% return as you sacrifice 80 of net salary and get 100 into your pension fund.
Trouble is that you don't get it straight away, though, you have to wait until you retire. If a 25 year old is fortunate enough to retire at 60, the benefit represents a 0.6% p.a. uplift to their fund - a benefit that would be wiped out were the current levy to continue beyond the 4 years envisaged at the moment.
This doesn't even go into the very real drawbacks of have no access to that money (in the event of unemployment, mortgage arrears, etc) until you retire.
No one knows, but whatever proceeds you get from your pension are added to your income and taxed accordingly. So long as your retirement income does not breach the tax free allowances you'll have done well from avoiding DIRT on any gains. If, however, you are subject to income tax in retirement you'll pay that tax on both the gains and the capital.
20% relief is actually an immediate 25% return as you sacrifice 80 of net salary and get 100 into your pension fund.
Trouble is that you don't get it straight away, though, you have to wait until you retire. If a 25 year old is fortunate enough to retire at 60, the benefit represents a 0.6% p.a. uplift to their fund - a benefit that would be wiped out were the current levy to continue beyond the 4 years envisaged at the moment.
This doesn't even go into the very real drawbacks of have no access to that money (in the event of unemployment, mortgage arrears, etc) until you retire.
Excuse my ignorance however its 25% (assuming no change) every year not spread over 35 years.
Pensions should not be used in isolation as a retirement plan; other vehicles such as cash, property, direct share investment etc should form a retirement plan.
Yeah, you can contribute each year and get relief on each year's contribution.
I was making the point that the benefit of the relief to a 25 year old (on the standard rate of tax) who intends retiring at 60 on the first year's contribution is the equivalent of an additional investment return of 0.6% p.a on that money over the 35 years.
If he puts in money at 40 the benefit would be 1.1% p.a. over the 20 years to retirement.
My point is that the younger you are, the less obvious it is you'll benefit over the long term, particularly as a result of the pensions levy and the fact that the annual charges will be higher for pensions than regular savings (driven by additional disclosure and regulatory requirements)
You can do all the above through a pension.
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