Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,687
Original social insurance class* | ||
Ordinary employees of companies | A | Employees PRSI payable until your birthday. No PRSI after that Employers PRSI - I don't know. |
Proprietary Director's salary | S | PRSI payable until your birthday - no PRSI after that. |
Self-employed income | S | No PRSI payable in the full year you hit 66 |
Rental and investment income | S | No PRSI payable in the full year you hit 66 |
Occupational pensions | M | No PRSI payable at any age. If you draw down your pension early, you don't pay PRSI on it source |
Drawdowns from an ARF | S | 4% PRSI payable until your 66th birthday. Definitely for under 66 No PRSI after your 66th birthday. source |
As such distributions from ARFs for people less that 66 years of age fall within the charge to Class S self-employed PRSI, or if the recipient of the distribution is a modified class contributor, Class K. Distributions and imputed distributions, after age 66 (current State Pension age), are not liable to Class S PRSI deduction. They are recorded under PRSI Class M for which there is a nil liability.
S | No PRSI payable in the full year you hit 66 |
If you are on Class S you pay Class S PRSI, no matter your age. If no PRSI is to be paid you move to PRSI Class M. It would be clearer to change the wording to reflect this.
original class | later class | ||
Ordinary employees of companies | A | M | Employees PRSI payable until your birthday. No PRSI after that Employers PRSI - I don't know. |
Or would I just change the title of the column to Original Contribution Class*
*When you are no longer liable for PRSI you move to Class M
It is odd that PRSI is deducted on ARFs and Directors' salaries until their birthday while there is no PRSI for the year on the self-employed or rental and investment income, but the explanation appears to be that it is because ARFs and Directors are paid under the PAYE system.
Changes to Pay Related Social Insurance (PRSI)
From 1 January 2024, a person will be able to draw down their State Pension (Contributory) between age 66 and 70. This will give a person the opportunity to continue to work and pay PRSI which may improve their contribution record at the date they decide to draw down their State Pension (Contributory).
As it stands, a person who is an employee and is aged 66 or over does not pay PRSI on their income (although their employer will pay Class J at the 0.50% rate). A self-employed person who is currently aged 66 or over does not pay PRSI (returned at Class M, nil contribution).
From 1 January 2024, the upper age limit for PRSI exemption is being changed by legislation from age 66 to age 70. This will apply to the employee, the employer and the self-employed PRSI liability.
This change will apply to all persons who are employees and the self-employed with the exception of the following main categories:
The PRSI position for people who have already reached age 66 by 1 January 2024 will be unaffected by the changes. For example, employees do not have to pay PRSI on their income and their employer will continue to pay Class J at the 0.5% rate.
- people who have already been awarded the State Pension (Contributory)
- people who have already reached 66 years of age by 1 January 2024 (born before 1 January 1958)
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