I continue to find pension wrappers are a powerful tool for building FIRE wealth quickly. Let me demonstrate with a couple of quick examples:
The wise among you will now being saying ‘but pensions are just a tax deferral scheme’ and that’s certainly true but let’s look at how that will play out in FIRE. The UK in my view can almost be considered a tax haven for those with enough wealth that work is not required. To demonstrate let’s take £20,000 from that pension pot every year. The 25% pension tax free lump sum effectively gives one £5,000 tax free. Then one also gets a 0% tax rate from the £11,000 Personal Allowance leaving just £4,000 subject to 20% Basic Rate tax. That works out to be an effective rate of tax on the £20,000 of just 4.0%.
Move to the Mediterranean and it could be even more favourable. Cyprus, for example, gives a choice of how pensions can be taxed. The first is 0% tax until you earn EUR19,500 with the next band being 20%. In this example our £20,000 (assumed to be EUR22,460) sees an effective tax rate of just 2.6%! The other method favours high pension sums as the income is taxed at the flat rate of 5% on amounts over EUR3,420. In this example one’s effective tax rate would be 4.2% so one would pick the former in this example.
- Over my FIRE journey I am fortunate to have found ways to earn more which means that I am today a 45% additional rate tax payer. On top of that I also have to pay 2% employee national insurance on the last of my earnings. This means that if I earn £10 and I don’t salary sacrifice it into a pension wrapper I only end up with £5.30 to invest.
- My employer allows pension salary sacrifice, has a contribution match up to a certain percentage and also gives me 10% of the 13.8% employer National Insurance that they save when I contribute to the company pension. So under these conditions if I put that same £10 into the company pension I actually end up with £21 to invest. That’s nearly 4 times more.
- Even if I continue to contribute to the pension wrapper once the employer match is over its still favourable. In that instance I still end up with £11 going into the pension which is more than 2 times the savings outside of the pension.
The wise among you will now being saying ‘but pensions are just a tax deferral scheme’ and that’s certainly true but let’s look at how that will play out in FIRE. The UK in my view can almost be considered a tax haven for those with enough wealth that work is not required. To demonstrate let’s take £20,000 from that pension pot every year. The 25% pension tax free lump sum effectively gives one £5,000 tax free. Then one also gets a 0% tax rate from the £11,000 Personal Allowance leaving just £4,000 subject to 20% Basic Rate tax. That works out to be an effective rate of tax on the £20,000 of just 4.0%.
Move to the Mediterranean and it could be even more favourable. Cyprus, for example, gives a choice of how pensions can be taxed. The first is 0% tax until you earn EUR19,500 with the next band being 20%. In this example our £20,000 (assumed to be EUR22,460) sees an effective tax rate of just 2.6%! The other method favours high pension sums as the income is taxed at the flat rate of 5% on amounts over EUR3,420. In this example one’s effective tax rate would be 4.2% so one would pick the former in this example.