Donate to Remove ads

Got a credit card? use our Credit Card & Finance Calculators

Thanks to bruncher,niord,gvonge,Shelford,GrahamPlatt, for Donating to support the site

Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

Gilgongo
Lemon Slice
Posts: 427
Joined: November 5th, 2016, 6:51 pm
Has thanked: 158 times
Been thanked: 130 times

Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663892

Postby Gilgongo » May 11th, 2024, 4:24 pm

I'm reading this document, which talks about the "month 1" emergency tax issue, but having some trouble fully understanding it:

https://www.investcentre.co.uk/sites/de ... yments.pdf

I retired on April 5th 2024. I've been sent a P45 from my employer, which duly gives 05/04/2024 as my last day of employment with them. It shows my tax code as "1191L". I'd like to start drawing down small amounts of accumulated cash from my SIPP (using UFPLS) at some point (probably no more than about £10,000 over the year in total, and I will have perhaps another £4-5,000 in taxable income over that time).

Am I right in suspecting that this P45 isn't valid for the current tax year, so I'm unable to avoid emergency taxation and will have to claim it back when I do my self assessment for 2024/25?

Gilgongo
Lemon Slice
Posts: 427
Joined: November 5th, 2016, 6:51 pm
Has thanked: 158 times
Been thanked: 130 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663893

Postby Gilgongo » May 11th, 2024, 4:41 pm

Oh actually, 1/12 of my emergency code will mean a £12,570/12 = £1,047.50. So maybe I'm not looking a much of an over-payment if I'm going to be taking about that amount as my first withdrawal?

Alaric
Lemon Half
Posts: 6116
Joined: November 5th, 2016, 9:05 am
Has thanked: 21 times
Been thanked: 1427 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663911

Postby Alaric » May 11th, 2024, 8:23 pm

Gilgongo wrote:I
Am I right in suspecting that this P45 isn't valid for the current tax year, so I'm unable to avoid emergency taxation and will have to claim it back when I do my self assessment for 2024/25?


I believe there's a form that enables excess taxation on the first payment to be reclaimed fairly quickly. It's been mentioned on the lemon fool boards.

kempiejon
Lemon Quarter
Posts: 3649
Joined: November 5th, 2016, 10:30 am
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 1220 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663915

Postby kempiejon » May 11th, 2024, 8:49 pm

I was looking at this recently. https://www.gov.uk/guidance/claim-back- ... ayment-p55
I have not accessed any pensions but that was where the research went.

Gilgongo
Lemon Slice
Posts: 427
Joined: November 5th, 2016, 6:51 pm
Has thanked: 158 times
Been thanked: 130 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663939

Postby Gilgongo » May 12th, 2024, 9:20 am

Oh OK. Just more bureaucracy I suppose :-) But at least it's only in the first year. I'm also hoping the overcharge will be pretty small given my small withdrawals.

swill453
Lemon Half
Posts: 8014
Joined: November 4th, 2016, 6:11 pm
Has thanked: 999 times
Been thanked: 3666 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663946

Postby swill453 » May 12th, 2024, 9:53 am

Gilgongo wrote:Oh OK. Just more bureaucracy I suppose :-) But at least it's only in the first year.

Not really. It's more to do with large withdrawals early in the tax year. They'll be overtaxed whether or not you have an emergency tax code. I'm in my sixth year of drawdown and currently in the process of reclaiming about £4K of extra tax.

Yes I know I could plan my withdrawals differently to avoid it, but I don't want to. Maybe giving HMRC all this extra work will force them to tweak the system to avoid the over-taxation in the first place.

I'm also hoping the overcharge will be pretty small given my small withdrawals.

Yes that's likely the case. Regular smallish withdrawals minimise the issue.

Scott.

Gersemi
Lemon Slice
Posts: 509
Joined: November 4th, 2016, 3:57 pm
Has thanked: 539 times
Been thanked: 228 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663956

Postby Gersemi » May 12th, 2024, 10:43 am

The form is a P55.

If you make several withdrawals in a year, then the first one will be on a mth 1 basis, but then if it is your only PAYE source HMRC should issue a tax code to the payer, so subsequent withdrawals are taxed correctly (in fact this would enable the payer to refund tax overdeducted, but I have no personal experience of this situation, so cannot confirm this).

Gerry557
Lemon Quarter
Posts: 2129
Joined: September 2nd, 2019, 10:23 am
Has thanked: 184 times
Been thanked: 593 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663957

Postby Gerry557 » May 12th, 2024, 10:45 am

I asked a similar question recently of behalf of someone else. The replies included doing monthly sums or upto the tax threshold and submitting a P55 form. Someone also replied that the P55 took a month to reclaim and was fairly painless but HMRC would contact you to make sure your figures added up as you have to guestimate savings income etc

Gilgongo
Lemon Slice
Posts: 427
Joined: November 5th, 2016, 6:51 pm
Has thanked: 158 times
Been thanked: 130 times

Re: Trying to understand "month 1" drawdown taxation

#663959

Postby Gilgongo » May 12th, 2024, 10:51 am

I see - I was holding off going into drawdown until I got my P45 and tax code. But seeing as that seems to make no difference as it's for 2023/24 in my case, I'll go ahead I think and just see what happens. I did write to HMRC a couple of months before I retired saying when my last day would be and how I planned to fund my retirement (almost all of which is from my ISA), but hey.


Return to “Pensions - Practical Problems”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests