Automatic Enrolment pension schemes have been with us for more than 10 years now. They’ve been a success. They represented a change from “you can contribute some of your salary to a pension if you want to, but you’ve got to set it up yourself” to “some of your PAYE earnings will automatically be contributed to a pension unless you take positive action to come out of it, and then keep taking that action every few years if you want to stay out of it”. It was thought that many people might come out, but plenty would stay in. In fact, the vast majority stayed in. The government tops up your own contribution AND your employer has to contribute too - generally, people have to be very short on income in order to be willing to sacrifice the free money.
There’s a complicating factor, which is that there are two mechanisms by which the schemes can operate (and all employers pick one and one only - you don’t see them giving employees a choice). There’s no difference in how the employer contributions work, but there is a difference in the tax relief on the employee’s own contributions:
- Relief at Source (RAS). In these schemes, for every £8 you contribute, HMRC add another £2. That means everyone gets 20% tax relief from the outset - £10 in their pot at the cost of £8. If your income is above £50,270, and you’re therefore paying tax at a rate above 20%, you can save more tax, but you have to do a bit of extra work to get it.
- Net Pay Arrangement (NPA). In these schemes, your contribution is knocked off your salary before the tax on your payslip is worked out. That means that the tax relief you get depends upon your income:
- If your income for the year is going to be less than £12,570 anyway, you’ll get no tax relief at all! The tax on your payslips was going to be zero, it’s still zero.
- If your income for the year is going to be between £12,570 and £50,270, then the reduction in your gross means that you save 20% tax on the contribution. Just the same as your friend in an RAS scheme.
- If your income for the year is going to be over £50,270, then you’ll save tax via the tax deduction on your payslip at a higher rate - the exact rate depends on your income. The best case scenario is if your income would otherwise be between £100,000 and £125,140 - the reduction in your gross means that you save 60% tax on the contribution! You don’t need to do anything to get all the tax relief you’re due, it all happens on your payslip.
There’s one type of person who loses out permanently here. It’s NPA person #1. They get no tax relief at all! The lowest income people, if they’re in an NPA scheme, get the least government contribution to their pot. An employer who is likely to employ a bunch of people like this might lean towards an RAS scheme if they were kind.
A person who has income between £12,570 and £50,270 should be indifferent to which mechanism is in use. They save 20% either way.
A person who has income above £50,270 should be more or less indifferent between the mechanisms as they needn’t miss out anything - but if they’re in an RAS scheme they just have to put a little more effort in. If they have to do a tax return anyway, the work is minimal - keeping track of their contributions for a tax year and sticking the number in a box on the return. If they don’t have to do a tax return, it’s still not that much work. They don’t have to join the tax return system - they can just write to HMRC once a year to tell them about their contributions, or tell HMRC via their Personal Tax Account. HMRC will just get the employer to adjust their monthly PAYE deductions to get to the right overall result.
In reality, there are likely to be tens of thousands of people who should be doing this, but aren’t. If you’re a higher-rate taxpayer and you don’t know what kind of scheme you’re in, it’d be a good idea to find out! The most commonly used provider, NEST, is a RAS scheme - 20% relief at the time, but you’ve got to do the work yourself to get any further relief you’re due. The second most commonly used provider, The People’s Pension, offers employers a choice of either option at the setup stage, so it could be either! You’d be able to find out from your employer, or from your online account - or from an accountant or PAYE professional looking at your payslips! And if you’re actually in a salary sacrifice system - which is probably the third most common way of dealing with all this - then that’s effectively an NPA, so you’re getting all your relief up-front.
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