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Sale of Pension

Last post Fri, Aug 28 2009, 4:55 PM by Independent-Mortgage-Broker. 2 replies.
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  •  Tue, May 05 2009, 7:32 AM

    Sale of Pension

    I have a private pension that has been frozen since my redundancy in 2005,the maturity date is 2025 but I was wondering, seeing that I will be 50 next year would I be able to sell the pension to get the full (at that time) value? If so, what companies would I approach?

    All information greatly appreciated.

    • Post Points: 20
  •  Tue, May 05 2009, 11:50 AM

    Re: Sale of Pension

    It depends when you are 50 for a start - if it is after April 2010 then the minimum retirement age is moving to 55 - so that is the first point of call.

    Second - you cannot sell your pension - this is not an option on a pension.

    Your options are - leave the money where it is, and let is grow over the next few years, or you could transfer it to another provider if the fund has not been growing well since you last paid into it. If you have a company pension scheme, this may take the transfer and this may be adventageous as it may purchase so extra benefits.

    If you are eligible to take the money, the most you can take out of a Personal Pension is 25% of the fund as tax free case - so if there is £50,000 in the fund you could have £12,500 as Tax Free Cash and use the rest to purchase an annuity, which would give you an income.

    This is not the only solution but without knowing lots more details it is hard to say.

    I would approach an IFA as your first point of call and take this from a recommendation as this is always best!

    Hope this helps!

    • Post Points: 20
  •  Fri, Aug 28 2009, 4:55 PM

    Re: Sale of Pension

    BigMatt has got most of it spot on.

    You can of course take the tax free cash, which is usually 25% (some older schemes can be more). You can then put the rest into what is called drawdown, but not actually take it until a later point. Bear in mind that once you have taken your pension, the 75% balance is subject to 35% tax in the event of your death. In fact, the highest tax charge on a pension is 82%!

    You need to use an IFA to utulize the "open market option" as it's rarely better to stick with the same company.

    Brian

    • Post Points: 5