Donate SIGN UP

Pension Payments

Avatar Image
jackthehat | 09:13 Fri 02nd Jun 2023 | Personal Finance
6 Answers
Mrs JtH has received notification that she has a small pension from a company she worked with 25 years ago.
It is in the sum of £1,306.52. She has also been given a lump sum figure tax-free.

Can any of you knowledgeable peeps work out how much, at current rates, she would receive weekly/monthly from this?

Thanks.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 6 of 6rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by jackthehat. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
It varies hugely, depending on age, indexing, guarantee period, escalation, JLFD? etc etc. Annuity rates are better than ever at the moment but for such a small amount they'll probably have a mechanism for you to take the lot. Anyway she can have £326.63 of that tax free.
Here is an annuity calculator:
https://www.retirementline.co.uk/landing/?v=default-fast&keyword=rl-corp&utm_source=SEO+Direct#yourpension
Question Author
Hmmm......just under £3 per month....lol

Thanks, TTT.
If an annuity then depends on age health and whether fixed or RPIlinked...but only going to be around £2 -3 a month. Maybe a drawdown is possible...drawn down maybe £10 a month roughly over 10 years
09:25, yes that's approximately 3% depending on which options you choose it could be more. Try that when the BR was 0.01 over a year ago and you'd be getting about 50p! As I said though for small amounts you can usually take it all then it's up to you to deal with tax issues that may arise.
Question Author
She had no idea that this even existed and can't decide whether to cash it in, or take it as an annuity; I'll pass on your comments.

Many thanks for your help TTT and b-i-w
assuming it's flat at £3 per month she'll have to live approx 25 years to eat through the cost of an annuity. If you chose escalating by RPI then a lot less. If that helps, in this case it's such a small amount I'd probably take the dosh up front.

1 to 6 of 6rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Pension Payments

Answer Question >>