You could do this or you could go onto your personal tax site on HMRC, update your earnings and HMRC will change your tax code so you pay the correct amount each month
I've started receiving an old pension (first payment was 28th March), which is paid gross of tax. As I'm still working, I need to pay tax on the extra income. What are my options for doing this? I'm assuming I just need to fill in a self assessment form at the end of 2024, and pay what I owe at that point. Is that correct, or is there anything else I should be doing?
You could do this or you could go onto your personal tax site on HMRC, update your earnings and HMRC will change your tax code so you pay the correct amount each month
If you are working do you really need it, can you not delay it until you stop, surely that would put you in a better tax position
Yes, it's definitely a pension (and not tax free cash), from a company I left many years ago.
If you don't need the extra cash, and salary sacrifice is an option in your workplace, then it would be most tax efficient to sacrifice an equivalent value from your earnings into a pension, and use the DB pension to live on. Saves you tax and NIC now, and also 25% tax free when you start to draw that pension down in the future
It should still be taxed on an emergency code pending HMRC telling them what tax code to use.
This may help with continuing to pay into a pension.
https://www.investorschronicle.co.uk...-personal-one/
Last edited by craig1912; 4th April 2024 at 20:02.
OK, a quick update: seems I was wrong about pretty much everything
I have a PAYE number with the pension scheme, and they produce monthly payslips that detail the amount paid, tax paid etc. I've checked my tax code, and I'm on an emergency code, so I think I'll wait till the next payment to make sure it's all looking correct.