The weekends are passing fast in the run up to the end of the tax year. Before we know it, it will be 23rd March when the budget will be announced so why not get a head start on the financial planning needed before the end of the tax year and check the list below.
1. National Savings
The interest rates may not be market leading but as National Savings and Investments is 100% backed and guaranteed by the UK Treasury it is arguably the safest place for your money. Disappointingly they currently have no tax free savings certificates on offer – But you can save up to £30,000 tax free into Premium Bonds with a chance every month to win £1 million or one of hundreds of thousands of other tax-free cash prizes. And you can get your original money back at any time.
2. Capital Gains Tax
Got Gains? - Have you incurred capital gains this year? Each individual, even children, have a Capital Gains Tax (CGT) allowance of up to £10,100. You could crystallise gains (for example from gains in the value of shares you hold) without paying a penny of tax.
3. Use your ISA allowance
You can shelter up to £10,200 this tax year. Funds saved in an ISA (cash or stocks & shares) means you pay no further income tax and no tax on any gains.
For more reasons why to use your ISA allowance see the article on:
http://greenfinancial.blogspot.com/2011/03/fye-tips-55-reasons-isa.html
4. Use your pension allowance
Depending on your situation you could contribute anywhere from up to £3,600 to £255,000 before April.
Everyone, even non-earners or non taxpayers can pay in up to £2,880. If you pay this amount the tax man automatically adds £720! Making a total of £3,600 invested.
So real cost to you is £2,880 for £3,600 in your pension
Parents and Grandparents can even do this for their children or grandchildren.
See previous blog posts for more end of tax year pension tips
5. Inheritance Tax
There are numerous ways to mitigate or reduce your liability but a simple end of year allowance that is often missed is the ability to give away £3,000 from your capital each year without any inheritance tax implications. This saves £1,200 per person in potential future inheritance tax liability.
Remember you can also give away smaller gifts of up to £250 per donee
6. Venture Capital Trusts
Often only for the brave of heart or very risk orientated Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs) offer adventurous investors the chance to invest in some of the smaller companies in the UK. In return for taking on more risk a generous tax rebate of up to 30% could be available. Definitely one for professional advice though, not generally a ‘DIY’ product.
7. Will Review (or finances in general)
Have your circumstances changed this year. Births, Deaths & Marriages and all sorts of other happenings can be the catalyst for reviewing and changing your Will, or even triggering a review of your finances in general. Financial Spring Clean anyone?
And finally, want to keep one step ahead?
Why not plan for next year’s ISA contribution now? The annual allowance will rise to £10,680, with half of that available to invest in cash if you wish.
Ian Green. This is my blog where I talk about my work in financial services as well as other bits and bobs from my life. The idea is that prospective and existing clients can read more about me, what I do and how I do it. You can view my website at www.iangreen.com where you can also find how to get in touch.
Showing posts with label financial year end. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial year end. Show all posts
Friday, 4 March 2011
Tuesday, 1 March 2011
FYE Tips - 5.5 Reasons - ISA
5 and a half reasons to use your ISA allowance before April 5th 2011This is not intended to be a political statement. As with all my blog posts professionally I remain neutral. Of course I have a personal political point of view but that has no place here.
But have you, like me, noticed that the Government is getting better at taking our money off us?
With taxes rising and inflation eating into the purchasing power of our salaries and savings there has never been a better time to take advantage of one the easiest and arguably most generous tax break of all – investing in an ISA (Individual Savings Account)
Still not convinced? Here are 5 reasons to use your ISA before April 5th this year:
1. Avoid Higher Taxes
More and more of us are being caught in the higher taxation net. No matter what individual tax seems to go down, the overall tax burden is continuing to rise. The so-called ‘tax freedom day’ when we stop contributing to Govt coffers and start to keep our own money (see http://greenfinancial.blogspot.com/2010_12_01_archive.html) is getting later and later in the year – This year it is May 30th.
The Government’s stated desire to take increasing numbers out of the tax system altogether by raising the personal allowance (They are aiming for the first £10,000 everyone earns to be tax free) has come at a price. It is being paid for by those who would have been at the top end of the basic rate tax band but have now tipped into the ranks of the “higher paid” (even if bringing up a family on £40,000 or so doesn’t exactly feel like the high life!).
For those fortunate or hard working enough to earn over £100,000 the personal allowance is progressively taken away until at about £113,000 there is no personal allowance at all. So if you earn over £150,000 half of your earnings go straight to the government. All earners are about to pay another 1% a year on National Insurance (surely now just income tax by any another name!). I could go on
2. Save More Tax Free
The ISA tax break is actually getting better.
Having been increased to £10,200 last year, the annual allowance is due to rise by the rate of inflation in April to £10,680. That means that a couple can put aside more than £21,000 a year between them completely free of further income tax and with no capital gains tax to pay - ever. Mixing both cash based and shares based ISAs means that for most people the ISA allowance, coupled with the £50,000 a year that they can put in their pension each year, means they don’t need to worry so much about tax on any of their short, medium and long-term savings.
3. Use It or Lose It
If you choose not to take advantage of it by 5 April you can’t roll it over into the next tax year. Many people have built up really sizeable pots over time – At Green Financial with have many clients with six figure plus ISAs
We have many more clients with far more modest amounts gradually accruing via the discipline of regular monthly savings. But if you miss the opportunity there is no going back.
4. Flexibility
Sure, Pensions are great, they have their place in long term saving and the upfront benefit of tax relief on contributions is especially attractive to higher rate taxpayers (and even more so to those paying the top rate of 50% income tax). But there is a price to pay for the tax relief uplift and it is that your money is locked away until at least the age of 55 … and even then there are restrictions on what you can do with your money … and you pay tax on the income you earn from your pension pot. With an ISA there’s no upfront benefit but there is also no additional tax to pay ever again … and there’s no restriction on when and how much money you can take out of an ISA. For some this freedom is the difference between starting to save and not. ISAs are flexible in other ways too. You can shelter most forms of savings and investments in an ISA. With some limitations, you can mix and match cash and stocks and shares and funds (including property funds) within the ISA tax wrapper. If you don’t know where you want to put your money and are still deciding whether to go the ‘DIY’ route or to seek fee based professional independent financial advice then a ‘cash park’ type ISA could be a good stopping off point while you make up your mind.
5. Avoid CGT
Some people say that ISAs are not really all they are cracked up to be, especially for basic rate taxpayers. It is true that most people never exceed the £10,000 or so of CGT (capital gains tax) we are all allowed to incur each tax year before we are liable for tax. But you only need to accumulate a £100,000 pot for a 10% annual return to tip you into tax-paying territory. Steady saving and a tail-wind from the market could easily get you there but if you have not bothered with the ISA tax wrapper in years past you cannot rewind the clock later on. When CGT was just 18% that might not have seemed such a problem but at 28% it is much more of a consideration and who knows where it might go in future.
5.5 And finally … One of the best things about the use it or lose it ISA allowance is the way that around this time of year (often referred to as ‘ISA season’) it forces us to be disciplined about saving over time. The astute investor can, over time, benefit from the phenomenon known as ‘pound cost averaging’ – see http://greenfinancial.blogspot.com/2011/02/pound-cost-averaging.html)
Whether month by month or viewed as year by year, what this means is that we are obliged to invest in the market in all phases of the investment cycle and so we benefit from buying when markets are depressed and when, left to our own devices, we might shy away from committing ourselves.
So there we have it, five and a half reasons to use your ISA allowance before April 5th 2011.
The required small print: Please don’t take this article as personal or specific financial advice. It is intended to be guidance only. The value of any tax break will depend on your personal circumstances. Tax and the associated laws are subject to almost constant change. This is correct as at the time of writing. E&OE. If you are in any doubt as to whether this information is of benefit to you please seek independent financial advice, ideally fee based. Please remember if you invest in stocks and shares the value of your investment can go up as well as down. Other elements such as currency exchange fluctuations could affect the value of your investment. If you have property based investments you may not be able to sell when you wish to realise your funds. Past performance is no guarantee of future returns. If you invest in cash based investments inflation may erode the purchasing power of your savings.
Monday, 28 February 2011
FYE, Pension - Carry Forward 3 years
The annual allowance that can be contributed to apension falls from £255,000 for most people to £50,000 in the new tax year starting 6 April 2011.However there is a welcome return for 'carry forward' legislation.
This is where a person can carry forward unused relief from the previous 3 years
And even better news, this is being introduced retrospectively, so large payments are possible from 6 April 2011.
This could be ideal for high earners (normally considered around the £130,000-£150,000+ mark, see previous 3 blog posts) whose payments were restricted to £20,000 in each of the last two years (2010/11 & 2009/10)
Case study:
Dorothy Perkins paid £35,000 into her pension in 2008/09
Her payment for the next two years was restricted to £20,000 in each year (although if she'd been allowed, Dorothy would have contributed the £35,000 she wanted to)
So on 6 April 2011, Dorothy could pay:
£50,000 + the unused relief from the previous 3 years
= £15,000 from 2008/09 + £30,000 from 2009/10 + £30,000 from 2010/11
= a total of £75,000 carry forward
So Dorothy (and her employer) could contribute a total of £125,000 for the 'pension input period' (see previous blog posts for Jargon buster on pension inputs) ending in 2011/12
Friday, 25 February 2011
FYE, Tips Pension – Earner OVER £130,000
FYE, Tips Pension – Earner OVER £130,000
Anti-Forestalling rules will restrict the level of tax relief for individuals with ‘relevant income’ of £130,000 or more (in this or one of the previous two tax years)
This blog post will show you how some people could actually pay up to 12x more than they thought (£255,000 instead of £20,000) into a pension and still obtain full tax relief
Two options are:
1.
Reducing relevant income by making
a) a pension payment of up to £20,000
b) a gift aid payment
2.
Closing the pension input period (see yesterday’s blog for a jargon buster on pension input periods) before tax year end – then making higher payments as soon as the new tax year begins
Case Study
Brian Jenkins earns £149,999. He could make a gross pension payment of £20,000, thus reducing his total relevant income to £129,999. At this level the anti-forestalling rules don’t apply so Brian can now make full use of the £255,000 annual allowance!
Anti-Forestalling rules will restrict the level of tax relief for individuals with ‘relevant income’ of £130,000 or more (in this or one of the previous two tax years)
This blog post will show you how some people could actually pay up to 12x more than they thought (£255,000 instead of £20,000) into a pension and still obtain full tax relief
Two options are:
1.
Reducing relevant income by making
a) a pension payment of up to £20,000
b) a gift aid payment
2.
Closing the pension input period (see yesterday’s blog for a jargon buster on pension input periods) before tax year end – then making higher payments as soon as the new tax year begins
Case Study
Brian Jenkins earns £149,999. He could make a gross pension payment of £20,000, thus reducing his total relevant income to £129,999. At this level the anti-forestalling rules don’t apply so Brian can now make full use of the £255,000 annual allowance!
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