NoMoreKickingCans;183003 wrote:Pensions can be left IHT free anyway.
Why would you draw more pension, paying income tax on it, to then gift to a child from surplus income ?
To give earlier ? To keep the pension capital below the LTA ?
I 'went into drawdown' as the pension capital approached LTA a few years ago. (BCE 1) and took the 25% tax free lump sum. Too tempting to leave it vulnerable to political risk.
For a variety of reasons no income was taken from it until 7 years ago and the pension healed itself in the interim.
Since income drawdown started, the capital value has been subject to market growth in broadish equilibrium with income withdrawals.
The next BCE will occur at age 75 (BCE 5a) at which point a snapshot capital value, taking account of capital growth as a percentage of LTA, will again be assessed against whatever LTA then applies.
The relatively stable equilibrium of growth against income withdrawn has so far kept capital value reasonably close to LTA and so, accepting the unknowns of market performance, Rishi's rule- changing, and his repression of the income tax threshold ( I don't want to pay 40% ta on any of the income) it is possible BCE 5a will not hurt too much.
The approximate equilibrium might even benefit from advantageous changes - above inflation rise in tax thresholds or LTA etc, but ...maybe not.
fwiw, so far the pot has grown slowly but surely in size due restrained withdrawals (avoiding 40% income tax), but that can change of course.
That was the thinking but no claims to it being at all logical, wise, or even terribly coherent.