Personal Allowance

It's up to £7.k odd for me and the wife, meaning this year, the wife and I can take home £76k (£38k each) tax free this year, made up of salary and dividends....:)
 
I'd probably but a hose, or a speed boat!
Or some spelling lessons :p

Out goings are personal choice, as is where you live. That's almost twice whatI make, as a single person and I'm comfortable, if I was on 40k I would be utterly laughing!
If you don't own or rent a house, have a family and drive a car then £20k would be comfortable.
 
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Yeah it's £9.4k starting now. I've worked most years since year 2000, and interestingly, it went up much slower in those days. It was around £4k in 2000, then it was £5k in 2007. Bigger increases started in 2008, so that over the next 7 years (same time length as £4k-£5k) it has effectively doubled to £10k in 2014.
 
Personally I think its a small step in the right direction, higher earners have had it far to easy.

I'd say you're clueless, I pay more in taxes than you earn as does my wife, I would hardly call that getting off lightly.
 
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[TW]Fox;24153131 said:
There are loads of reasons why you might have a lower personal allowance - BIK for example. The most common of which would be a company car, or health insurance, or other taxable benefits.

I have a company car which now makes it more complex then? /sigh :p

I hate our tax code, I think it would help massively to have a larger PA, flat tax rate for everyone with (perhaps) a slight increase for the absurdly large incomes.

Doubt it will ever happen though :(
 
So how much do you have to earn to be on the higher tax bracket.

Doesnt the personal allowance come off the net salary you earn?

IE if I earn 45k, pa is -9k so i wouldnt pay higher tax rate?
 
[TW]Fox;24153182 said:
£32k of taxable income, so a total package of £41k or more, pretty much.

(figures rounded for ease)

That sucks, I would have to work out the difference - might not be worth going for a promotion!
 
That sucks, I would have to work out the difference - might not be worth going for a promotion!

Its always worth going for promotion, you only pay 40% on anything above £41k so you will always earn more.

Edit: Too slow :)
 
Yeah just stuck it into taxman calculator, its not that bad, because as you say only the amount over the limit is at 40%.

Still annoying though, if I increased pension contributions, is that a way around it?
 
Yeah just stuck it into taxman calculator, its not that bad, because as you say only the amount over the limit is at 40%.

Still annoying though, if I increased pension contributions, is that a way around it?

Yes you could increase your pension contributions for anything above £41k and avoid higher rate tax. Occupational pensions are deducted before income tax is taken off but not before NI.
 
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Out goings are personal choice, as is where you live.

Where I live now is not out of choice but its the only place I can get job. What I do is quite specialist and opportunities for me are only available in London. I use to live in the North West but there were just no jobs there.
 
Where I live now is not out of choice but its the only place I can get job. What I do is quite specialist and opportunities for me are only available in London. I use to live in the North West but there were just no jobs there.

Maybe you should look at diversifying your skill set?
 
Maybe you should look at diversifying your skill set?
You will almost always be better paid if you are working for a company in a role that is aligned with your specialism. Unfortunately, that does mean roles are fewer and farther between. It's a balance and it suits some people better than others. I work in a bizarrely specialised industry, where even after years many people still don't have a clue what's really going on.
 
Yes you could increase your pension contributions for anything above £41k and avoid higher rate tax. Occupational pensions are deducted before income tax is taken off but not before NI.

That's not quite correct, as more and more businesses are choosing to make pension contributions via salary sacrifice which negates NI.
 
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