I've invested in property last 20 years or so. Never had a pension and never contributed to one. Now have 5+ properties and no mortgage. Looking at retiring soon.
Aren't you sure how many properties you have?
I've invested in property last 20 years or so. Never had a pension and never contributed to one. Now have 5+ properties and no mortgage. Looking at retiring soon.
Aren't you sure how many properties you have?
I'm currently using salary sacrifice to pay 14.4% of my salary into a SIPP without any employer contributions. Now that my student loan is paid off I'm thinking of increasing that to 15%.
My employer does offer a workplace pension through The People Pension but the employer contribution is only 1% and the rate of return for TPP was lower than the industry average, so I thought I was better off opting out and doing my own thing.
Aren't you sure how many properties you have?
Maybe it’s changed then, it was a few years ago. Even at 3% I’m not sure it would be worthwhile but it’s certainly more attractive than 1%.The minimum is 3% in the UK. Are you sure it’s only 1%. That goes against legislation.
I'll be going all in on every move I make until I retire, so it'll either be getting there in a lambo or a 1996 Nissan Micra.Isn't everyone on here going to be a crypto and/or stock market millionaire?
I've invested in property last 20 years or so. Never had a pension and never contributed to one. Now have 5+ properties and no mortgage. Looking at retiring soon.
Must say that i get jealous of some employer contributions in this thread. I get 5%![]()
I think property is the only other thing. If the average joe can get on the property ladder instead of paying rent that will be in a much better position come retirement!
Holy smokes Gibbo. Hopefully you get to enjoy that in your old ageThe max going in to my pension is £5250 which I thought wasn't too bad!
I've invested in property last 20 years or so. Never had a pension and never contributed to one. Now have 5+ properties and no mortgage. Looking at retiring soon.
The minimum is 3% in the UK. Are you sure it’s only 1%. That goes against legislation.
Maybe it’s changed then, it was a few years ago. Even at 3% I’m not sure it would be worthwhile but it’s certainly more attractive than 1%.
I get 3%!!! Absolute minimum, and the company is very successful.
I just put my details into the Pensionbee calculator and it says I should expect a £26k, which isn't too bad considering there's two of us and we should be mortgage-free by then. But to get to £40k a year where I think we'd be really comfortable I need to more than double my current contribution.
Agreed. I only get 4% from my company. Last few days workplaces have all been the same too. The pay has been pretty reasonable, just not the pension offering.Must say that i get jealous of some employer contributions in this thread. I get 5%![]()
This is where I struggle a bit with pensions - because we have no idea on the rules/age requirements at the point which we retire. It's basically a big Ponzi scheme and whilst I'll pay-in, I'm quite hesitant to go all-in.Out of interest, something i was thinking about recently.
I have a S&S ISA which similar the poster above, i try and use more than my pension. It seems tempting to withdraw money out of it when i'm close to 55 or even retirement age and top my pension up, up to the max for the year to get the tax top up. Then in theory at 55 you could withdraw 25% penalty free and then put that back into the Pension and double claim the tax top up or put it back into the ISA.
It feels like there'll be rules against the above, and i'm sure things will change in the next ~20 years. But it feels like an option.
Out of interest, something i was thinking about recently.
I have a S&S ISA which similar the poster above, i try and use more than my pension. It seems tempting to withdraw money out of it when i'm close to 55 or even retirement age and top my pension up, up to the max for the year to get the tax top up. Then in theory at 55 you could withdraw 25% penalty free and then put that back into the Pension and double claim the tax top up or put it back into the ISA.
It feels like there'll be rules against the above, and i'm sure things will change in the next ~20 years. But it feels like an option.