Getting to Grips with the Basics
As the end of the tax year approaches, now is the perfect time to ensure you have your financial affairs in order and to double check you’ve taken advantage of all the tax-efficient allowances available to you.
YOUR PENSION You can contribute as much as you like into your pension, but there is a limit on the amount of tax relief you will receive each year.
This Annual Allowance is currently £40,000. An individual can’t use the full £40,000 Annual Allowance where ‘relevant UK earnings’ are less than £40,000, although your employer still could. You may be able to, however, carry forward unused allowances from the past three years, provided you were a pension scheme member during those years.
For every £2 of adjusted income (total taxable income including all pension contributions) over £240,000, an individual’s Annual Allowance is reduced by £1 (the minimum Annual Allowance is £4,000).
A Lifetime Allowance also places a limit on the amount you can hold across all your pension funds without having to pay extra tax when you withdraw money. This limit is currently £1,073,100.
If you have children under 18, a spouse who does not work, or who may not be earning enough to pay Income Tax, you can invest into a pension for each of them. The maximum annual contribution you can currently make is £2,880 which, along with tax relief, would amount to £3,600 a year.
Your Individual Savings Account (ISA) Allowance
The ISA allowance is £20,000 for the 2021-22 tax year. You can put all the £20,000 into a Cash ISA, or invest the whole amount into a Stocks and Shares ISA or Innovative Finance ISA. You can also mix and match, putting some into Cash, some into Stocks and Shares and the rest into Innovative Finance if you wish. However, the combined amount can’t exceed your annual ISA allowance. With pension contributions subject to annual and lifetime limits, ISAs represent an excellent way of topping up retirement income. There is no Income Tax or Capital
Gains Tax (CGT) payable on ISA proceeds. You cannot carry over your ISA allowance once the tax year has ended.
In certain circumstances, investors can use existing holdings to open or top up their ISAs, this arrangement is known as a Bed & ISA. This is a way of transferring assets held outside an ISA into an ISA so that future investment income and growth are sheltered from tax. The investments are sold, cash is transferred into the ISA and the investments are repurchased. Charges apply and you could end up with a CGT liability if the gain you make on selling the asset together with any other taxable gains you make within the tax year exceeds the annual CGT allowance.
A Lifetime ISA (LISA) is another option available to adults aged under 40, or under 50 for existing LISA holders.
Junior ISA Contributions
Junior ISAs are a tax-efficient way to build up savings for your children (and grandchildren) and must be opened by the parent or person with parental responsibility. JISAs can be opened for any child who does not hold a Child Trust Fund (unless the CTF is transferred to a JISA) and who is under 18 and living in the UK.
The value of investments can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount you invested. The past is not a guide to future performance and past performance may not necessarily be repeated.
Getting to grips with the Basics
As the end of the tax year approaches, now is the perfect time to ensure you have your financial affairs in order and to double-check you’ve taken advantage of all the tax-efficient allowances available to you
The money can be held in Cash and/or invested in Stocks and Shares. They work in exactly the same way as your own ISA, however, the maximum investment is £9,000 per child.
Gifting for Inheritance Tax (IHT) Purposes
You can make gifts worth up to £3,000 in each tax year. These gifts will be exempt from IHT on your death. You can carry forward any unused part of the £3,000 exemption to the following year, but if you don’t use it in that year, the exemption will expire.
Certain gifts don’t use up this annual exemption; however, there is still no IHT due on them, e.g. wedding gifts of up to £5,000 for a child, £2,500 for a grandchild (or great-grandchild) and £1,000 to anyone else. Individual gifts worth up to £250 are also IHT-free.
These are relatively small sums, but you should use these up where possible to gradually reduce your overall estate.
Using Your CGT Allowance
Every individual is entitled to a CGT annual exemption, which is currently £12,300 (£6,150 for trusts). You can’t carry forward this relief, and so you may look to crystallise gains up to this amount before the end of the tax year. Capital losses can also be used to offset gains.
Above the CGT exemption, tax is payable at 10% for basic rate taxpayers and 20% for higher rate taxpayers. The taxable gains on residential property are taxed at 18% and 28% respectively.
Assets can be transferred between married couples and civil partners without incurring a gain until the assets are subsequently disposed of. The disposal could then use both their annual exemptions.
Using your Dividend Allowance
For the current tax year, investors can earn up to £2,000 in dividend income tax-free.
How much tax you pay on dividends above the Dividend Allowance depends on your Income Tax band:
Basic rate 7.5%
Higher rate 32.5%
Additional rate 38.1%
From April 2022 Dividend Tax will increase due to the Health and Social Care Levy.
The information contained in this guide is based on our understanding of current allowances and rates at 10.1.22, which could be subject to change
We're here to help
With the tax year-end imminent, please get in touch with us as soon as possible if you have any questions or want to discuss any aspect of your end-of-year tax planning.
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