TAX ON PENSION
Main categories of pension:
An individual can have a state pension, a private pension, a workplace pension, or any combination of them.
Workplace pensions can also be divided into two types: -
The basic difference is what each plan promises its participants
Private pensions, or personal pensions, work similarly to a defined contribution workplace pension. This means that you’ll get out what you put in, plus tax relief and any investment gains. One of the key differences between workplace pensions and personal pensions is tax relief. With a workplace pension, your contribution is taken before tax which can reduce the overall tax you pay on your salary. However, with a personal pension, your contributions typically happen after tax. See more at the bottom of this page.
Country rules - Canada, the United Kingdom
Tax relating to pension in the U.K. normally include the following: -
1. Contribution to the pension,
2. Income earned from the assets in the pension,
3. Distribution received from the pension.
Broadly speaking:
income that is paid into a private pension is exempt from income tax;
income earned from investments within the pension fund is also exempt (and capital gains are exempt from capital gains tax);
money received from the pension is taxed.
This is often referred to as "exempt-exempt-taxed" or "EET" treatment.
Comparison - UK and Canada
Private pensions
In the United Kingdom |
In Canada |
In the USA |
ISA Individual Savings Account |
TFSA Tax Free Savings Account |
Roth IRA Roth Individual Retirement Account |
Self-invested Personal Pension (SIPP) for employees |
|
401k plan |
Small Self-Administered Scheme (SSAS) for self-employed or owner-directors |
Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) |
401k plan |
Comparison – <Exempt-Exempt-Taxed, the E-E-T route>
|
Contribution |
Earning |
Withdrawal |
Withdrawal age |
Canada (RRSP) [E-E-T] |
Tax-exempted, subject to the limit of 18% of reported income or CAD $27,830 (2020) |
Tax-exempted |
Taxed |
at age 71 |
The U.K. (SSAS) [E-E-T] |
Tax-exempted, subject to limit GBP 60,000 per year [*] |
Tax-exempted |
Taxed |
at age 75 |
The U.S. [E-E-T] 401k plan |
Tax-exempted, subject to the limit of $20,500 under age 50 and over, $27,000 [*] |
Tax-exempted |
Taxed |
at age 72 |
[*] 2023 adjustment
401(k) plan limits |
2022 |
2023 |
Change |
---|---|---|---|
Maximum salary deferral for workers |
$20,500 |
$22,500 |
+$2,000 |
Catch-up contributions for workers 50 and older |
$6,500 |
$7,500 |
+$1,000 |
Total contribution limit |
$61,000 |
$66,000 |
+$5,000 |
Total contribution limit, plus catch-up contribution |
$67,500 |
$73,500 |
+$6,000 |
Savings Account Comparison - <Taxed-Exempt-Exempt, the T-E-E route>
|
Contribution |
Income earned and gains after contribution |
Distribution/withdrawal |
Canada (TFSA) |
Taxed, contribution limited to CAD $6,000 per year |
Tax-exempted |
Tax-exempted |
The U. K. (ISA) |
Taxed, limited to GBP20,000 per year |
Tax-exempted |
Tax-exempted |
The U.S. (Roth IRA) |
Taxed, limited to US$6,000 (or 7,000 for those aged 50 or above) |
Tax-exempted |
Tax-exempted |
TFSA = Tax-free savings account; ISA = Individual savings account; Roth IRA = Roth individual retirement arrangement
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