Hello,
I'd like to ask a few questions about rules surrounding the workplace pension contribution tax relief, limits and carry forward.
1. The following article: https://www.gov.uk/tax-on-your-private-pension/pension-tax-relief says:
> You can get tax relief on private pension contributions worth up to 100% of your annual earnings.
Could you confirm that it's "100% of one's gross annual earnings", please? E.g. if my gross earnings in a tax year amount to £30,000, then I should able to get a tax relief on pension contributions up to £30,000 gross (£24,000 net), yes? I'm asking because assuming there is an annual income personal allowance of £12,570, then in that financial year I would pay tax of £3,486 (i.e. 20% of £30,000 - £12,570). So if I contribute (via my monthly contribution from my employment and via any private lump sum contributions) £24,000 net in that year, then I would get £6,000 in tax relief, however that's more than the amount of income tax that I would have paid in that year (£3,486). So, could you confirm that despite this difference between tax paid and tax relief received, I am able to get a tax relief on the total of £30,000 gross in the example above, please?
2. The following article: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/check-if-you-have-unused-annual-allowances-on-your-pension-savings says:
> You can carry forward unused annual allowances from the 3 previous tax years.
Assuming the following:
- I would earn £30,000 in the current financial year
- The workplace pension contribution limit in the current financial year is £60,000
- I have unused annual allowance from previous 3 years that amount to £70,000.
Would I be able to get a tax relief on a lump sum contribution of e.g. £75,000 (£93,750 gross) in current financial year by the means of the unused annual allowance carry forward (£60,000 from current year, and £33,750 from previous 3 years, starting from the earliest)? I'm asking because I've been told in person, and there also seems to be an opinion on the Internet that pension contribution carry forward may be used only if one's *annual earnings* exceed the annual pension contribution limit. In the example above, the annual earnings (£30,000) do not exceed the pension contribution limit (£60,000). So, again: may the carry forward rule be used merely due to the amount of contribution's exceeding the annual contribution limit, or must one's annual gross earnings exceed the annual contribution limit in order for one to be able to use pension contribution carry forward rule?
3. If I use up my annual pension contribution limit via a lump sum contribution in the middle of a financial year, would the usual monthly pension contributions from my employment continue to receive tax relief without problems, assuming I still have unused annual allowance from the previous 3 years to carry forward? Would I need keep informing the HMRC every month (or perhaps once, at the end of the current financial year) of how much unused annual pension allowance I carried forward (and from which years)?
4. Assuming that the pension carry forward rule may be used in all of the examples above, are you able to tell me why the following workplace pension says the following:
https://thepeoplespension.co.uk/pension-tax/
> You’ll need to meet 3 conditions to use carry forward: 1. You must earn at least the amount you wish to contribute in total in the current tax year (...). For example, if your earnings are £70,000 – you can only contribute up to £70,000 and get tax relief on this.
And why they require that anyone making a lump sum contribution should sign the following declaration:
https://thepeoplespension.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/TPP-FO-0023.0522-Personal-payments-form_v5.pdf
> The total of all contributions paid into any registered pension schemes on which I am entitled to tax relief will not exceed the higher of £2,880 net (£3,600 gross) or my relevant UK earnings. (...) I’m aware that the amount I can pay into my pension in a tax year and receive tax relief on is £60,000, providing I have the relevant UK earnings to support this.
Both statements indicate that one cannot make a lump sum contribution larger than one's annual earnings, and that carry forward cannot be used without this condition being met. Is this in fact the case? I.e. that in order to use carry forward, one has to support the entire tax relief by earning *in the current tax year* at least the amount of money they wish to contribute to their pension scheme, and that this is in fact where the tax relief comes from (i.e. from the income tax paid in the current year)?
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Apologies for the length of these questions. Thank you and looking forward to your answer.