poorrelative
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I will also receive full UK state pension at 67 of about 10k pa....how does this effect the limits of no more than 50% final salary?
Thanks a million Liam for the info. Little concerned by the €115 salary cap as I may breach this in future years.Treat the two jobs as two separate employments. So you are limited to 50% final salary / 150% lump sum based on your €60,000 public service salary. Your private company salary and pension arrangements are not related to your public service benefits. While there are overall limits on salary (€115,000) and maximum lump sum (€200,000) from all sources, you don't look like you'll be breaching these which keeps things simpler. In short, one won't affect the other.
If it's an Occupational Pension Scheme you have set up in respect of your own company, as well as the 25% lump sum option, you also have two alternative methods of calculating the retirement lump sum: 3/80 of salary for each year of service with your company or a higher scale which takes into account your other pension scheme benefits. You should probably go back to your pension scheme broker to get them to run the calculations for all three methods to establish which method works best for you.
There are other planning points that might be relevant here e.g. increase your salary in your private company after you have retired from the public service for three years which then affects the calculations of lump sum from that pension scheme at retirement.
The UK state pension doesn't affect these limits.
Regards,
Liam
www.FergA.com
Thanks a million Liam for the info. Little concerned by the €115 salary cap as I may breach this in future years.
Thanks Conan - got it. I've been looking into executive pensions and from my understanding if I plan to retire at 60 then once I am 55 the company can contribute up to 400% of my salary so instead of paying myself 50k and contributing 10% to a pension (5% personal and 5% company) I could pay myself 10k as salary and contribute 40k to pension. Here there would be no personal contributions at all so no concerns about €115k limit. Also the 40k contributions will be exempt from tax, PRSI and USC totalling 52% relief instead of only 40% relief from personal contributions.The €115,000 salary cap only impacts personal contributions. There is no similar limit on the contributions your company can invest. The limits for Company contributions can be much more generous, depending on your salary from that role.
from my understanding if I plan to retire at 60 then once I am 55 the company can contribute up to 400% of my salary
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