Donate SIGN UP

receiving lump sum

Avatar Image
Connemmara | 10:40 Thu 13th May 2010 | Personal Finance
4 Answers
Can any of you work this out.

If you receive £6,200 and have to pay back tax of £2,000 leaving £4,200 - this is for 10 years of monies paid into a work fund

What tax would I have to pay using above monies but for 17 years of monies paid into a work fund.

Thanks (it is the tax I am interested in)
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Connemmara. 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.
If the money paid in was paid in at the same rate over 17 years the amount paid in would be £6200 x17/10= £10540 (an increase of £4350).

The tax position is less clear. If your figures are exact figures I can't see how the £2000 relates exactly to the £6200. If we assume tax is paid at the same rate the tax will also increase by a factor of 17/10 from £2000 to £3400.

However as the tax rate seems to be more than 20% I think some of your income may have been taxed at 40%. Therefore it's possible that the additional £4350 will be taxed at 40% (£1740).

So it depends on the tax rates that would apply
Question Author
thanks factor 30 - yes you are right £2,000 exactly was taken from my friend's lump sum and we did work it out to be 20% which we thought was wrong too. But that is exactly what they took
Question Author
sorry meant to say it was 40% - do you think she should look into that.
Question Author
I think it should £6,200 divided by 10 years multiplied by 17 gives you a different amount. the same for the tax. ta ra

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Do you know the answer?

receiving lump sum

Answer Question >>