C
My understanding is you can do this, if you can show a guaranteed income of 12K for the rest of your life. The thing is I wouldn't be retired from my current job. So, I'd still be working, but the pension fund from the current job would amount to a pension annuity over that limit, at normal retirement date. So, would that meet the criteria?
In any case, the situation wouldn't arise for a couple of years. I'd be curious to know what are the chances these kind of rules might be relaxed a bit given the current financial situation for a lot of people. Impossible to answer I know.
Is this accross the board ? I have a BOB which I could technically access next year. If I cash in the lump sum is tax free ? No offence to the pension industry but it seems if someone can access 25% tax free now it should be jumped at.You could take your 25% tax-free cash from the Buy-Out Bond now and, if the balance of the fund is less than €119,800, re-invest the balance in an Approved Minimum Retirement Fund (AMRF). You'd have no access to this AMRF until such time as you have a guaranteed lifetime income of 1.5 x State pension (currenrly €18,000) and then you could draw it down, but at least you'd have the 25% cash now.
I can understand the tax argument - hardly that difficult to sort out. But some of the other arguments are unconvincing. It seems all the more absurd to fret about this given the elephant in the room of debt levels and consequent calls for "forgiveness" surely a far more radical notion.There has been some discussion of allowing early acess to pension funds, perhaps in certain circumstances such as mortgage arrears.
Is this accross the board ? I have a BOB which I could technically access next year. If I cash in the lump sum is tax free ? No offence to the pension industry but it seems if someone can access 25% tax free now it should be jumped at.
Surely, a simple change would be to allow someone where an annuity would be below a certain level, and consequently not likely to enhance quality of life, to just take that as a taxed lump sum.
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