Hooverfish
Registered User
- Messages
- 194
Context: I'm one of the 400,000 people who worked in the UK for whom records of some national insurance contributions appear to have been lost by HMRC. In my case, 5 years, 1987-1992, just before I moved to Ireland.
I have sent them some evidence I have of my payments but I'm getting nowhere except boilerplate letters offering me the chance to "buy back" years from the UK since 2006 at a cost of £780/year. They are accepting that I have 7 years contributions from 1977 but I think there should be 12 years in total.
I'm not alone... For anyone else affected, I recommend:
and stuff by former Pensions minister Steve Webb on Royal London eg https://www.royallondon.com/media/good-with-your-money-guides/topping-up-your-state-pension/
I only started checking into my own situation after it took me 18 months to sort out my husband's UK/Irish pensions. I won that one in the end, but it took a lot of hours.
I do remember that I wrote to the relevant Irish and UK social welfare departments in 1992 when I got here, asking for my records to be transferred (I think it was called an E301 form). Does anyone think it worthwhile trying to request this correspondence from Ireland under freedom of information in case it contains the info that has been lost by the UK? How?
It is just galling to remember the very long hours I worked in those days and that I paid up all my tax, NI etc. but if I cannot get back these entitlements, I might have to bite the bullet and pay to buy back years of entitlement, in order to have 10 years UK contributions for a partial pension, probably of about £48/week. However, the UK will only let you buy back since 2006/2007. These are years when I already have a full Irish PRSI record. Does anyone now how this potential time overlap pans out with the new total contributions approach to pensions? I don't get my pension until I am 68, in 2029...
I found information about the EU state benefits "overlapping" rules here [broken link removed]
This states on page 11 that the overlapping rules do not apply to state pension - it's excepted - but does anyone have any clue how this may be affected by the recent Brexit agreement on social payments or other more recent law? Obviously I don't want end up paying to back years to fix the UK mess just to discover in 2029 that I wasted my cash twice!
Thank you for any information or links that may be relevant.
I have sent them some evidence I have of my payments but I'm getting nowhere except boilerplate letters offering me the chance to "buy back" years from the UK since 2006 at a cost of £780/year. They are accepting that I have 7 years contributions from 1977 but I think there should be 12 years in total.
I'm not alone... For anyone else affected, I recommend:
Your state pension: are there missing years in your contributions?
Hundreds of thousands of UK workers risk using inconsistent information to plan retirement
www.ft.com
‘Millions could be hit by missing pension records’
Former minister warns of unreliable archives for older savers
www.ft.com
The sweeping pension shake-up that could leave you with nothing at all
A new system to be introduced next month is supposed to be simpler and fairer. But many are in for a nasty retirement surprise
www.theguardian.com
I only started checking into my own situation after it took me 18 months to sort out my husband's UK/Irish pensions. I won that one in the end, but it took a lot of hours.
I do remember that I wrote to the relevant Irish and UK social welfare departments in 1992 when I got here, asking for my records to be transferred (I think it was called an E301 form). Does anyone think it worthwhile trying to request this correspondence from Ireland under freedom of information in case it contains the info that has been lost by the UK? How?
It is just galling to remember the very long hours I worked in those days and that I paid up all my tax, NI etc. but if I cannot get back these entitlements, I might have to bite the bullet and pay to buy back years of entitlement, in order to have 10 years UK contributions for a partial pension, probably of about £48/week. However, the UK will only let you buy back since 2006/2007. These are years when I already have a full Irish PRSI record. Does anyone now how this potential time overlap pans out with the new total contributions approach to pensions? I don't get my pension until I am 68, in 2029...
I found information about the EU state benefits "overlapping" rules here [broken link removed]
This states on page 11 that the overlapping rules do not apply to state pension - it's excepted - but does anyone have any clue how this may be affected by the recent Brexit agreement on social payments or other more recent law? Obviously I don't want end up paying to back years to fix the UK mess just to discover in 2029 that I wasted my cash twice!
Thank you for any information or links that may be relevant.