What should you do when you exceed the Pensions Annual Allowance, be that the normal £40,000 limit or you have a reduced Tapered Annual Allowance?
Your employer may offer you continued pension payments and your then face an Annual Allowance Tax Charge penalty or reduced pension payments and your employer pays you in additional salary or bonus.
We take a look at the options of either £100 into Pension or ‘£100’ Paid Bonus (after additional employers NIC allowance 13.8%) i.e. Employer pays employee Bonus of £88 + additional Employers NIC £12 = £100 total spend.
If Pension Contributions:
The employee is liable to annual allowance tax charge whether it is employer or employee contribution. In some cases you can ask the pension scheme trustees to pay the tax charge i.e. “Scheme Pays” but in many cases, employee will pay the tax charge at their highest rate of tax.
Basic Rate Tax Payer: £100 paid into pension less £20 tax charge – net benefit in £80.
Higher Rate Tax Payer: £100 paid into pension less £40 tax charge – net benefit in £60.
Additional Rate Tax Payer: £100 paid into pension less £45 tax charge – net benefit in £55.
How is the Annual Allowance Tax Charged Collected?
This can either be by the pension scheme refunding any tax relief to HMRC if you paid in perosnally (if not too late) or it will by by a tax bill settles by you on completion of your self assessment return for either excess employer contributions or your own (unless of course you have secured a "Scheme Pays" arrangement where the pension scheme trustees pay the tax charge).
Alternative: If Pay Employee £88 + Employers NIC £12 = £100 total.
Guidance
In our opinion, if you do not have long to go before retirement, then in most cases you may be better off taking the additional pay rather than pension contribution, if the employer will permit it. Could this mean the employer will then get caught for holiday pay, redundancy pay, sick pay on the higher amount?
If it is longer term to retirement then you may consider a pension contribution a better option with long term, tax free growth potential over the years rather than taking as pay and pay tax today. In addition, if you pass away prematurely, your loved ones may inherit the pension fund tax free.