In a recent article, I
mentioned that pension rules are changing this April. It certainly created a
few emails, with people asking questions about it.
Therefore, this week, I want
to look a little deeper into the subject of your pension and the Royal Leamington
Spa property market. George Osbourne, in last years’ Budget, announced pension
reforms that come into effect this April, which will give people with pension’s
unprecedented access to their pension pot and the freedom to look for
alternatives. In a nutshell, after the 6th of April, anyone aged
over 55 will be allowed to withdraw all or part of their pension pot and spend
it as they wish. Until now, you were allowed to take out a quarter of it and
were forced to buy an annuity policy with the rest.
However, my readers always
know that I like to tell it ‘as it is’. There are always two sides to a story,
good and bad. Let me tell you the bad news first. There are some hefty tax
implications by taking money from your pension pot. As before, as per the old rules,
the first 25% can still be withdrawn from the pension pot tax free but, here is
the sting in the tail, if you take more than a quarter of your pot (25%),
anything above that initial 25% level will be taxed as income. So if you
took the whole lot out, the first 25% will be tax free but the remaining 75%
will be taxed at your income tax rate of 20%, 40% (or even 45% if you earn over
£150,000 a year). .. and now the good news!
Under the old scheme, if you
bought an annuity, when you died your annuity normally died as well. You would
have no asset to pass on to your family. Also, the returns from pensions are
awful at the moment. The best rates according to Hargreaves and Lansdown (big
wigs in the City) state if you were 55 years old, the best rate you would get
on your annuity pension would be 4.4% fixed for life (so it would never go up)
or 2.2% but the payment would go up with inflation. The sort of rates (also known as yields in
the property investing game) being achieved in Royal Leamington Spa are in the
order of 4% to 6%.
The other aspect of property
investment is how the fact that property values have risen consistently over
the last 50 years. According to the
Office of National Statistics, the life expectancy of a 65 year old male in
Royal Leamington Spa is 19 years and 4 months (its only 16 years 9 months in
Nuneaton but 19 years and 9 months in Stratford – well they are posh there!).
If we roll the clock back 19 years 4 months to November 1995, property values
in Royal Leamington Spa have risen by 180.1% to today..you wouldn’t have had
that with your pension! But this is the
biggest win, even by taking a hit in income tax now, by buying a property, you buy an asset that you can pass on to your family when you die....
(or the cats home if they aren’t nice to you!).
So where next? It totally
depends which strategy you are going to look at, one strategy is to look to
achieve relatively small rental returns (ie low yields) in an up market area
which has decent capital growth or, alternatively, another strategy is to buy
properties in not so good areas known to produce a high returns (ie high
yields) but low capital growth (ie how much the value of the property goes up).
Now, I am not financial advisor, so cannot offer financial advice on what the
best thing for you with your pension is. However, I can share my knowledge and
experience of the Royal Leamington Spa property market, what to buy, what not
to buy and where to buy etc etc.
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