³ÉÈËÓ°Òô

Lifetime allowance

Produced by Tolley in association with
Employment Tax
Guidance

Lifetime allowance

Produced by Tolley in association with
Employment Tax
Guidance
imgtext

This guidance note looks at the lifetime allowance which applied until 5 April 2024. The lifetime allowance charge was removed from 6 April 2023 and the lifetime allowance itself was abolished from 6 April 2024. For details of the replacement system for taxation of pension lump sums, see the Pension income and lump sum allowances from 6 April 2024 guidance note.

Introduction

A lifetime limit on the total amount of pension value that can benefit from tax relief was introduced with effect from 6 April 2006, with a lifetime allowance charge being levied on any excess over this lifetime allowance.

This lifetime allowance charge was abolished with effect from 6 April 2023. When any pension value in excess of the lifetime allowance is taken, it is

Access this article and thousands of others like it
free for 7 days with a trial of Tolley+™ Guidance.

Powered by
  • 23 Oct 2024 10:20

Popular Articles

Taxation of dividend income

Taxation of dividend incomeIntroductionA dividend is a distribution of profit by a company to its shareholders.A dividend is not only a payment in cash. It can be the issue of new shares in exchange for forfeiting the right to a cash payment (a stock dividend). For more detail, see the Cash

14 Jul 2020 13:48 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Company cars

Company carsIntroductionCompany cars are one of the most common taxable benefits. The rules for calculating the benefit are complex, and the reporting requirements are more onerous than most benefits. Company cars are covered by very specific legislation. Detailed guidance on each of the following

14 Jul 2020 11:15 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Income tax paid on behalf of employee

Income tax paid on behalf of employeeIntroductionEmployers may wish to make payments of employment income to an employee / director without the employee suffering a tax or NIC cost on that pay. In other words, the employer wants to pay an amount net of tax and NIC. In some instances, often with

14 Jul 2020 11:58 | Produced by Tolley in association with Paul Tew Read more Read more