Single public service pension scheme and private prsa

Aldebaran

Registered User
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Hi there,
I currently work in the HSE and have been trying to understand my pension. From what I understand I am part of the single public service pension scheme which entitles me to a defined pension upon retirement which is based on an average of previous years of service. This sounds like quite a good deal!

I am unclear as to whether I can also start a private prsa pension on top of this and whether I would also be entitled to tax relief on this? The %contribution for my public pension is rather small, so starting a second prsa pension would seem like a very tax efficient way of saving rather than putting money into a normal savings account.

Also, what role do avcs play if you have a public service pension? Is it possible to apply these to defined benefit schemes or can they only be applied to private prsa type pensions?

Thanks in advance.
 
As a Single Scheme member you can take out an AVC and get tax relief up to the Revenue limits for your age.

There are two ways of going about this. One is via the provider linked to your public sector employer (usually Cornmmarket: https://www.cornmarket.ie/uploads/13292_AVC_Scheme_Member_SQ_Booklet_08-18_REBRANDED_FA_WEB.pdf). The advantage of this approach is convenience. Once you set up your AVC with your Cornmarket rep, your contributions are deducted at source in your wages' office and the tax relief applied there too. Administratively you can more or less forget about it.

The other option is to set up a PRSA-AVC with any of the other providers. I don't know the comparison but there have been several contributors on here saying that they got better value as regards charges and fees by going this route. The downside is that you have to pay your contributions directly from your taxed wages (direct debit) and claim the tax back from Revenue via your annual tax returns.

Keep in mind that with both of these options your benefits are linked to your main scheme. If you are short you can top up the tax free lump sum to the max allowed in your main scheme - the rest is usually transferred to an ARF. You cannot draw down any of these benefits until you retire, either at normal retirement age (68 if born after 1st Jan, 1961), via cost-neutral early retirement or, if it should transpire, ill-health retirement. In that regard, AVCs are more complementary to regular saving than a substitute.

This document from the Pensions Authority predates the Single Scheme but you may find the info on AVCs and PRSA-AVCs useful (I don't think PNS applies to the Single Scheme in the conventional sense described here) : [broken link removed]
 
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The other option is to set up a PRSA-AVC with any of the other providers. I don't know the comparison but there have been several contributors on here saying that they got better value as regards charges and fees by going this route. The downside is that you have to pay your contributions directly from your taxed wages (direct debit) and claim the tax back from Revenue via your annual tax returns.

I don't see the downside of setting up an AVC PRSA by direct debit.

You receive your PRSA2 (Tax) Certificate by post with the policy document. You send that to Revenue and ask them to adjust your tax credits. Revenue notify the employer and you see the adjustment in your wages.

Administratively, you can more or less forget about it - unless you increase/decrease the monthly contribution.

And, if you are comfortable doing the transaction on an 'execution only' basis - you save (up to) 5% of every contribution (depending on how much the scheme appointed intermediary is charging) .
 
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