North East Forum on Ageing

Pensioners’ concerns over paying income tax answered

(Source BBC news)

Charities are reporting heightened concern among pensioners who fear being dragged into paying income tax.

The state pension rose by 8.5% in early April, but the knock on effect is that hundreds of thousands of pensioners on lower incomes have been drawn into paying income tax.

Most pensioners will pay more tax this year as a result, owing to frozen tax thresholds.

Age UK and Independent Age both say they have seen an increase in calls to their helplines in recent weeks from pensioners confused about the issue.

Who will pay more tax?

If your sole income is a state pension then nothing should change for you. The increase for a single person brings the maximum state pension to £11,500 – still below the threshold when income tax begins to be taken at £12,570.

Additional Pension Credit payments are tax-free, so do not count towards the personal allowance of income before tax is paid.

Wages and workplace pensions

About 80% of pensioners get some extra income alongside the state pension such as from a private or workplace pension, or through a job. The likelihood is that most people in this category will have to pay income tax as their total income will be above £12,570.

A private pension or wage is taxed automatically at source through a PAYE number. That means the tax is taken out before the money even hits the bank account.

Tax codes should be checked to make sure the correct rate of tax is being paid, because it should only be 20% on anything that puts total income above £12,570.

Extra income

Earnings above the personal allowance from something else such as rental income as a landlord, should be declared through self-assessment forms as usual, according to HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).

A bigger bill should be expected this financial year, as the state pension increase will have pushed up overall income, but the process of paying that tax will remain the same.

Those who earn extra income, perhaps through interest on savings or investments that is not taxed through a PAYE number, may never have filled in a self-assessment before. HMRC said there was no need to complete a self-assessment. Instead, at the end of the tax year they would be sent a Simple Assessment, which is essentially a bill for the tax owed.

It would arrive next July and should be paid by the following January.

HMRC also said people could contact advisers, especially if they were going to struggle to pay, as the money could be collected in smaller instalments.

A Treasury spokesperson said: “Pensioners do not pay any income tax if their sole income is from the full new state pension, and we are standing by our commitment to maintain the Triple Lock by raising the basic state pension to almost £170 a week, after the largest ever cash increase last year the introduction of the Triple Lock and New State Pension means pensioners are on average £1,000 better off than if the state pension had just risen with earnings.”

GOV.UK links:

Tax when you get a pension: What’s taxed – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

Newsletter 158 — April 2024 – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)