1-in-10 over 55s have accelerated plans to access their pension during lockdown: here’s how to avoid a 90% annual allowance cut

Tom Selby
2 July 2020

•    AJ Bell research conducted in the early stages of lockdown suggests 1-in-10 over 55s are accelerating plans to access their pension as a result of COVID-19
•    Those who ‘flexibly access’ taxable income from their retirement pot will see their annual allowance cut from £40,000 to just £4,000
•    Anyone triggering the ‘money purchase annual allowance’ (MPAA) also loses the ability to ‘carry forward’ unused annual allowances from the previous three tax years
•    With the Government silent on the issue, savers need to take responsibility to ensure they don’t inadvertently hamper their ability to rebuild their retirement fund post-lockdown
•    However, it is still possible to take money from your pension without being hit by the MPAA

Tom Selby, senior analyst at AJ Bell, comments: 

“Even before COVID-19 hit, the MPAA felt like an unfair punishment for savers whose only crime was accessing taxable income from their pension pot. 
“During this crisis many more over 55s will be facing salary cuts or joblessness, while others will need to use their savings to help loved ones struggling to make ends meet. In such an environment, hitting people with a 90% annual allowance cut for taking even £1 of taxable income from their pension feels deeply unjust. 
“During the early stages of lockdown 1-in-10 over 55s said they had accelerated plans to access their retirement pot, and many more are likely to consider doing this as the Government support for businesses is pulled back between now and October.
“But with ministers refusing so far to take action on the MPAA, savers need to watch their step or face being hamstrung as they look to rebuild their retirement savings.”

Three ways to take money out of your pension without triggering the MPAA:

1: consider only taking your 25% tax-free cash

“While taking taxable income from your pension risks triggering the MPAA, just taking your 25% tax-free cash won’t. In order to access your tax-free cash you’ll need to ‘crystallise’ some or all of your pension – this just means choosing a retirement income route such as drawdown or buying an annuity.
“It is, however, possible to crystallise part of your pension in order to access your tax-free cash, leaving the remaining fund – including any further tax-free cash element – untouched.
“Take, for example, someone with a total pension pot worth £100,000. If they wanted to take out £5,000 to help a relative struggling during COVID-19, one option would be to crystallise £20,000 of their pension, with £15,000 going into drawdown and £5,000 available as tax-free cash.”

2: take advantage of little-known ‘small pots’ rules if you can

“While flexibly accessing taxable income from your pension will see your annual allowance reduced by the MPAA, there are ‘small pots’ rules which allow you to make taxable withdrawals while retaining your full annual allowance. 
“A small pot in this case is defined as a pension arrangement worth £10,000 or less. In order to class as a small pots withdrawal (and thus avoid triggering the MPAA), you must extinguish the entire pension pot you are accessing.
“You can make unlimited small pots withdrawals from any occupational defined contribution pension plans worth £10,000 or less. These are simply any pensions you may have which were set-up by an employer.
“For non-occupational DC plans such as SIPPs, you can close up to three pension pots by making a maximum of three small pots withdrawals.”

3: if you’re in ‘capped’ drawdown, don’t exceed your maximum income

“If you entered ‘capped drawdown’ before 6th April 2015 and stay within your income limits you will not trigger the MPAA. 
“Savers in capped drawdown have their fund invested and take withdrawals from their fund in the same way as regular drawdown. However, the key difference – as the name suggests – is withdrawals are capped at 150% of the equivalent Government Actuary’s Department (GAD) annuity rate. 
“Although this might sound complicated, it just means you can withdraw up to 150% of the income a healthy person at your age could receive from a lifetime annuity. If you breach this limit then you will have been deemed to have flexibly accessed your pension and so will trigger the MPAA.”

*A survey of 2,002 UK adults conducted for AJ Bell by Opinium between 24th – 27th April 2020

Tom Selby
Director of Public Policy

Tom is director of public policy at AJ Bell. He is a prominent spokesperson on retirement issues and his views are regularly sought by national print and broadcast media. Tom has successfully campaigned for a number of consumer-focused reforms, including banning pensions cold-calling and increasing pensions allowances, and he is passionate about improving outcomes for savers and retirees. Tom joined AJ Bell as senior analyst in April 2016, having previously spent seven years as a financial journalist. He has a degree in Economics from Newcastle University.

Contact details

Mobile: 07702 858 234
Email: tom.selby@ajbell.co.uk

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