liam bourke
Registered User
- Messages
- 48
Let's say you withdraw 4% of the ARF or €12,000. You will be taxed as if you earned that €12,000. If that's the only income you have that year, it would be exempt from Income Tax. If you have other taxable sources of income, then the €12,000 would be treated as just another source of income.
So at 65 say you retire you take out the 25% tax free (100k).Do you start taking out the arf then also at 65?
But what is the tax rate on the 12,000euro...it is very unclear on the web about this...
is there a threshold before you arre charged tax on the arf?
If your retirement choice is to start an ARF, then you do that at the same time as you withdraw the lump sum. If you're 65 when you set up the ARF then you should start taking an income from the ARF straight away, to avoid possible double taxation.
Have a look at this explanation of how Income Tax works. https://www.citizensinformation.ie/en/money_and_tax/tax/income_tax/how_your_tax_is_calculated.html
Your tax figures are far too high in this spreadsheet.
If you put the correct figures into your spreadsheet it changes the picture considerably.
- If your only income is €12,000 you'll pay no tax whatsoever. So the tax figures in the first three rows should be zeros.
- If your total income is €24,912 you'll pay a total of €1,437.
- If your total income is €27,912 you'll pay a total of €2,037.
I've assumed a single person, aged 65 and today's tax/USC etc. I haven't accounted for the reduction is USC at age 70, so the real figures will be better again.
How are you getting a figure of 1437 tax on a total income of 24912?
How are you getting a figure of 1437 tax on a total income of 24912?
€24,912 x 20% = €4,982 - Tax Credits €3,545 = €1,437
ok, so going by that calculation...i reckon on a 400k pension lump sum, you are saving about 25 percent (100,000euro) if you live to the end of your private pension!would that be about right? your private pension fund runs out by the age of 85/86
Excel file attached.
Roughly over the course of a pension how much growth do you expect to see?10%?
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