PRSA should have no ongoing charges. The occupational one may have a monthly policy fee even when paid up. Check the charges applicable on both while they are paid up. Also check the fund options available. In some cases it may make sense to keep such pensions separate - in others it may make sense to do something else with them (e.g. move the occupational fund to a buy out bond with lower charges and/or better fund options).
- Does it matter if the PRSA and the old company pension are just sitting there? AFAIK the PRSA charges are based on contributions, so is it fair to say that there are no charges while there are no contributions?
I'm not sure that you can merge a PRSA and an occupational fund in this situation although it may depend on specifics such as the value of the occupational fund etc. There are existing threads on this topic.
- Should I try and move the balance of one or more to the other (depending on which is performing best)?
Depends on your current financial commitments, target retirement fund value etc. 5% (+ 5% employer) sounds on the light side to me all things being equal.
- Is 5% too small an amount to be paying in at my age (with another 5% from the company)? Should I make more of an effort to reach the 20% limit (through AVCs)?
The CGT issue sounds wrong to me. Who told you that? However there are limitations on when and how you can merge an occupational fund with a PRSA so you may not be able to do this anyway.
- I asked last year about transferring the balance of the old company pension into my PRSA, but was told I'd have to pay capital gains tax because it was over €10k - where on the Revenue site can I find out the current limits/details? If I just phoned the PAYE phone number could someone there answer, or is there another number for pension-type questions?
See above. Get independent professional advice if necessary.
- What should I be looking at if I do try to consolidate the pensions, or is there any point?
Your pension cover is fragmented but other than the slight additional administrative hassle this may or may not be a bad thing. In simple terms you can merge the benefits from all pensions when you retire.
- If I leave the three as they are (and possibly pick up another one or two pensions over the coming 30odd years), what happens when I retire - can you lump all the pension money together to buy an annuity, or would you have to buy 3 or 4 separate annuities?
PRSA should have no ongoing charges. The occupational one may have a monthly policy fee even when paid up. Check the charges applicable on both while they are paid up. Also check the fund options available. In some cases it may make sense to keep such pensions separate - in others it may make sense to do something else with them (e.g. move the occupational fund to a buy out bond with lower charges and/or better fund options).
I'm not sure that you can merge a PRSA and an occupational fund in this situation although it may depend on specifics such as the value of the occupational fund etc. There are existing threads on this topic.
Depends on your current financial commitments, target retirement fund value etc. 5% (+ 5% employer) sounds on the light side to me all things being equal.
The CGT issue sounds wrong to me. Who told you that? However there are limitations on when and how you can merge an occupational fund with a PRSA so you may not be able to do this anyway.
See above. Get independent professional advice if necessary.
Your pension cover is fragmented but other than the slight additional administrative hassle this may or may not be a bad thing. In simple terms you can merge the benefits from all pensions when you retire.
Sorry - you are obviously correct. I was mistakenly focusing on monthly charges like policy fees and forgot about the annual management fee!Sorry to correct you Clubman but PRSA's do normally have an ongoing charge, that is the 1% management fee which the pension provider charges each year.
Correct again - I was thinking of the limits on going the other way - occupational to PRSA.You normally cannot transfer PRSA monies into an occupational pension scheme but checking the scheme rules will tell you for sure.
This is one area that I think should be discussed more.Is 5% too small an amount to be paying in at my age (with another 5% from the company)? Should I make more of an effort to reach the 20% limit (through AVCs)?
I've just scared myself with the pensions board calculator - apparently I'm going to live out my old age eating catfood.
Where do you (generic you) draw the line at what is disposable income? Say at the end of the year, after savings, mortgage, pension and general day to day expenses, I've got €1000 left over. Do you lodge that as an AVC, or take a holiday and replace the washing machine? I suppose I'm finding it difficult finding a balance between living life now (on the offchance that I don't make it to retirement age) and spending my final days in a bedsit being eaten by Alsatians.
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