Quizzes & Puzzles19 mins ago
Tax On Pensions
Last April after the rise in State Pension it was apparent I had slipped into the tax payer bracket.
A few weeks after the raise I rang the Pension Service to ask when or how was this tax taken.. the very pleasant lady replied it would be taken at source...as my only income is from my lower rate state Pension and my late husband's SERPs . I asked again how would this be paid..again it would be paid at source so knowing no better I assumed the Pension Servive had it in hand.
Yesterday I received a tax bill for 2023-4..a whole years payment when I had understood it was taken at source... no I wasn't!
Nor is it being taken for the currant tax year.
Why give pensioners a rise and taking back by another method.
Bewildered by it all!!
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Thisoldbird. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If that's what they said I don't see why they would have given that answer - state pensions are never taxed at source and they should have known that. But it doesn't change the fact that the tax is due, I'm afraid. The amount can't be huge and hopefully they'll have given you time to pay it- maybe 31st December.
We had a similar request once and forgot to repay it in December and they simply sent a polite reminder about 6 months later so we paid up then.
The State Pension isn't taxed at source and as for increasing the pension and then taking it back, you are paying 20% tax only on the amount over your personal allowance so you'll have more still than the previous year, even after tax.
They can't ask you to pay for this tax year, 2024/25 because they won't know how much tax you owe until the tax year ends on April 5th.
There is no tax code used by DWP because it's not taxed at source and The Pension Service (PS) should know that.
The tax year runs from April 6th to April 5th and the PS should also know HMRC will contact pensioners a few month after the 5th April if there's any tax to be paid for the previous tax year.
This is partly why whenever I speak to government departments these days I ask for the name of the person I am speaking to and also the town the office is in that I have got through to as they use many different ones. The office you think you have called is not always the same as the one you end up speaking to. Then I put the time of the call with these. They always say calls are recorded so it makes it easy for them to check that you are telling them the truth. Then if they have made a mistake you can often get them to change things.