Trustnet Direct Retirement Programme | Page 48

APPROACHING Capped drawdown The old income drawdown regime – which consisted of capped and flexible drawdown – was replaced with flexi-access drawdown in April 2015. While no longer available to new investors, capped drawdown may still offer some interesting benefits. The key reason to maintain a capped drawdown policy is for the ability to release income from your pension fund from age 55, yet retain the maximum £40,000 annual pensions allowance. Under the new rules, those who choose to take income from their fund using flexi-access drawdown or an uncrystallised funds pension lump sum (or UFPLS for short) are limited to a maximum annual allowance of £10,000. Capped drawdown has its restrictions, too. Withdrawals are limited –capped – to a figure of no more than 50 per cent above a level annuity based on numbers produced by the Government Actuary’s Department (GAD). If the income taken exceeds this limit, the policy immediately converts to flexi-access rules and limits. The upper income limit is reassessed every three years for those under age 75 – annually for those over 75 – and both are based on the individual’s age and fund size. It is only available to those who already have an arrangement in place, so you must be over the age of 55, but there is no upper age limit and you do not have to take any money out at all. That may seem odd, but the new freedoms have transformed pensions in to a rather efficient estate planning tool. Page 48 Death benefits are the same as those used for flexiaccess. If you die before you reach 75, all of it can be taken either as cash or drawdown – tax free – and may be passed on to a beneficiary. After the age of 75 it gets a little more complicated, but the terms are generous. If paid as a lump sum before April 2016, it will be taxed at 45 per cent. From the 2016/2017 tax year, it will be liable to the highest marginal rate of the beneficiary. If passed on as a drawdown arrangement, the income is treated like normal income and falls under the income tax rules. Despite the flexibility it offers, few will wish – or have the money – to invest more than £10,000 a year into their pension and so capped drawdown policies will gradually disappear as investors switch into flexiaccess or purchase annuities. Key points Capped drawdown lets you release income from your pension from the age of 55, yet retain the maximum £40,000 annual pensions allownace It is only available to those who already have an arrangement in place Withdrawals are limited to 50 per cent above a level annuity set by the government. If the income taken exceeds this, the policy converts to flexi-access rules and limits