Based on NW's figures £11,700 will be from his pension and the rest comes tax free from his AVC's.freespeech wrote: ↑16 Oct 2025, 16:26Also assuming you are correct £20477 is £362 per week after tax (no NI due from pension income).
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Got my statement today
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RobertT
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Re: Got my statement today
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NWpostie
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Re: Got my statement today
£11,727 is the pension backfilled with £8,750 AVC which is the lump sum which should be under or at the 25% threshold.freespeech wrote: ↑16 Oct 2025, 16:26Also assuming you are correct £20477 is £362 per week after tax (no NI due from pension income).NWpostie wrote: ↑14 Oct 2025, 15:21Cheers that's reassuring
I did a quick crunching of numbers
I took 10% away from the £13030 as a contingency for variation and tax.
Giving me a figure of £11,727 plus my Flexiplan and Bonusplan added together making £70,000 divided over 8 years in case the state pension age gets moved back which gives me £8,750 a year.
Add that together
£11,727 NRA60
+
£8,750 AVC
=£20,477 a year
Divided by 12 months = £1,706
Divided by 52 weeks = £393
What do you think ?
Assuming this is correct, I could live comfortably without claiming NRA65, one reason I was thinking of claiming it early is I would have to fight Capita again which I'm not looking forward to going by what other members on here have mentioned.
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freespeech
- MDEC
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Re: Got my statement today
Ideal, under the personal allowance so all tax free then.NWpostie wrote: ↑16 Oct 2025, 16:40£11,727 is the pension backfilled with £8,750 AVC which is the lump sum which should be under or at the 25% threshold.freespeech wrote: ↑16 Oct 2025, 16:26Also assuming you are correct £20477 is £362 per week after tax (no NI due from pension income).NWpostie wrote: ↑14 Oct 2025, 15:21Cheers that's reassuring
I did a quick crunching of numbers
I took 10% away from the £13030 as a contingency for variation and tax.
Giving me a figure of £11,727 plus my Flexiplan and Bonusplan added together making £70,000 divided over 8 years in case the state pension age gets moved back which gives me £8,750 a year.
Add that together
£11,727 NRA60
+
£8,750 AVC
=£20,477 a year
Divided by 12 months = £1,706
Divided by 52 weeks = £393
What do you think ?
Assuming this is correct, I could live comfortably without claiming NRA65, one reason I was thinking of claiming it early is I would have to fight Capita again which I'm not looking forward to going by what other members on here have mentioned.
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rogersh
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Re: Got my statement today
Can someone please clarify how the Pension Increase Amount is calculated on the NRA 60 pension.
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RobertT
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Re: Got my statement today
It's the total amount of inflationary increases you've received over the years.
Links to all RM pension related websites are here
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rogersh
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rogersh
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Re: Got my statement today
Robert, If you could indulge me once again on your calculation on the age 65 benefits for someone who wants to increase the lump sum payment, asking for a colleague!
"Estimate" current value of annual pension NRA 65 = £1,500 x 20 = £30,000 divided by four = £7,500 (have I got this right ?)
Is this amount then added to the DBCBS total ? with 25% being tax free.
"Estimate" current value of annual pension NRA 65 = £1,500 x 20 = £30,000 divided by four = £7,500 (have I got this right ?)
Is this amount then added to the DBCBS total ? with 25% being tax free.
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RobertT
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Re: Got my statement today
There's two ways to work things out depending on whether you want to give up some pension to fund the lump sum(1), or use the DBCBS to fund it(2).
1. Pension x 20 / 4 = max tax free lump sum from pension.
In money terms based on your figures:
£1,500 x 20 = £30,000 / 4 = £7,500
The pension will then be reduced by roughly £50 for each £1,000 in lump sum, so in your case by about £375.
The whole DBCBS will then be paid out as a UFPLS, meaning 25% of that will also be tax free and the remainder classed as income and taxed accordingly.
2. Pension x 20 / 3 = max tax free lump sum from DBCBS
In money terms:
£1,500 x 20 = £30,000 / 3 = £10,000
The pension will stay at £1,500, while the remainder of the DBCBS will be paid out as a UFPLS.
1. Pension x 20 / 4 = max tax free lump sum from pension.
In money terms based on your figures:
£1,500 x 20 = £30,000 / 4 = £7,500
The pension will then be reduced by roughly £50 for each £1,000 in lump sum, so in your case by about £375.
The whole DBCBS will then be paid out as a UFPLS, meaning 25% of that will also be tax free and the remainder classed as income and taxed accordingly.
2. Pension x 20 / 3 = max tax free lump sum from DBCBS
In money terms:
£1,500 x 20 = £30,000 / 3 = £10,000
The pension will stay at £1,500, while the remainder of the DBCBS will be paid out as a UFPLS.
Links to all RM pension related websites are here
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rogersh
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Re: Got my statement today
Thank you once again Robert for taking the time to reply to my query.
Genuinely for a colleague, I know not to give advice on Pensions, but the info you provide is very useful for those (majority I think) who don't have a clue.
Genuinely for a colleague, I know not to give advice on Pensions, but the info you provide is very useful for those (majority I think) who don't have a clue.