Pub Talk Volume 3 – Claiming Tax Relief

tax relief

What are the methods of claiming tax relief?

Tax relief on personal contributions to a pension arrangement can generally be given in three ways:

  1. Net pay

For a scheme operating under the net pay arrangement, the employer deducts the contribution from the member’s pay before operating Pay As You Earn (PAYE) – in this way the member gets tax relief immediately at the highest marginal rate. On a net pay basis, because contributions are deducted from pay, tax relief will only actually be available on a maximum of earnings, even if these are less than £3,600. For example, if relevant UK earnings are £3,000, this will be the maximum gross amount that tax relief will be available on. Tax relief on personal contributions made by a third party can’t be given under net pay. If such a contribution is made, the member must claim any relief due via self-assessment. Typically, occupational pension schemes accept personal contributions using the net pay method.

 

  1. Relief by claim

The contribution is paid gross, and the member claims tax relief through self-assessment. Typically, retirement annuity contracts accept personal and third party contributions using the relief at claim method. Note, retirement annuity contracts can accept contributions using the relief at source method if a provider has made a decision to allow this. If an individual’s earnings are below £3,600 pa and they have a retirement annuity contract to which they make gross contributions, they will only be able to claim tax relief on up to 100% of their earnings. If an individual has no earnings, they will be unable to claim tax relief on any pension contributions they make.

  1. Relief at source

Under a scheme operating relief at source, contributions are paid net of basic rate tax. The scheme administrator claims the tax relief due from HMRC and applies it to the member’s arrangement. Higher and additional rate taxpayers can claim the extra tax relief through self-assessment. Typically, personal pension and stakeholder arrangements accept personal and third party contributions using the relief at source method. Although it is possible under HMRC guidance, for retirement annuity contracts to accept contributions by relief at source, some providers will only accept gross contributions in practice.

What are the limits on tax relief?

The tax-relievable limit for personal contributions is the higher of:

  • 100% of the member’s relevant UK earnings or
  • £3,600, per year.

All contributions paid by a member plus those paid on their behalf by a third party or by their employer are tested against the annual allowance. If a member’s total contributions exceed their annual allowance limit for the tax year (even after carry forward has been used), they will still be able to claim higher rate and additional rate tax relief on their personal contributions, but an annual allowance charge will apply to the excess contributions.

Rehobot our smartbot

Claiming tax relief via self assessment, Self Assessment: claim tax relief on pension contributions – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

 

 

For help, speak to one of our financial planners.

I need some help with

Show more options

What Kind of assets do you own?

Select all that apply

Cash Savings

Most people underestimate what they have so it's important to spend a bit of time taking stock. It helps us match you to the right adviser

Pensions

Most people underestimate what they have so it's important to spend a bit of time taking stock. It helps us match you to the right adviser

Stocks, Shares, & Funds

Most people underestimate what they have so it's important to spend a bit of time taking stock. It helps us match you to the right adviser

Investment Properties

Most people underestimate what they have so it's important to spend a bit of time taking stock. It helps us match you to the right adviser

One final Step to getting the help you need

We will email you when we have found your financial adviser.
Cookie Policy

Cookie Policy

Most websites you visit will use cookies in order to improve your user experience by enabling that website to ‘remember’ you, either for the duration of your visit (using a ‘session cookie’) or for repeat visits (using a ‘persistent cookie’).
Some websites will also use cookies to enable them to target their advertising or marketing messages based, for example, on your location and/or browsing habits. Cookies may be set by the website you are visiting (‘first party cookies’) or they may be set by other websites who run content on the page you are viewing (‘third party cookies’).

What is in a cookie?

A cookie is a simple text file that is stored on your computer or mobile device by a website’s server and only that server will be able to retrieve or read the contents of that cookie. Each cookie is unique to your web browser. It will contain some anonymous information such as a unique identifier and the site name and some digits and numbers. It allows a website to remember things like your preferences or what’s in your shopping basket.

Accepting or declining cookies

You can choose to accept or decline cookies. Most web browsers automatically accept cookies, but you can usually modify your browser setting to decline cookies if you prefer. This may prevent you from taking full advantage of the website.

The types of cookies we use

First party cookies
First party cookies are set by the website you are visiting, and they can only be read by that site.

Third party cookies

Third party cookies are set by a different organisation to the owner of the website you are visiting. For example, the website might use a third-party analytics company who will set their own cookie to perform this service. The website you are visiting may also contain content embedded from, for example YouTube or Flickr, and these sites may set their own cookies.
More significantly, a website might use a third-party advertising network to deliver targeted advertising on their website. These may also have the capability to track your browsing across different sites. It is important to note that advertising cookies are not set for UK visitors to the rehowealth.co.uk website.
Rehowealth.co.uk  does use advertising cookies but these will not track your behaviour outside of the  rehowealth.co.uk website and other sites in our network.

Session cookies

Session Cookies are stored only temporarily during a browsing session and are deleted from the user’s device when the browser is closed.

Persistent cookies

This type of cookie is saved on your computer for a fixed period (usually a year or longer) and is not deleted when the browser is closed. Persistent cookies are used where we need to know who you are for more than one browsing session. For example, we use this type of cookie to store your preferences, so that they are remembered for the next visit.