The Annual Allowance (AA) is £60,000 from 6 April 2023 for the tax year 2023/24. Previously it was £40,000 up to the tax year 2022/23.
Annual allowance is the amount by which the value of your pension benefits may increase in any one year (years run from 6 April to 5 April) without you having to pay a tax charge.
The assessment covers any pension benefits you may have in all tax-registered pension arrangements – not just this scheme. If your pension benefits in the Kent Pension Fund exceed the AA, we write to you by the October following the end of the tax year.
The annual allowance also applies in the year you take your benefits, although there is an exemption in the case of serious ill health retirement or death.
Exceeding the Annual Allowance
If you exceed the total annual allowance with your Kent pension, we will write to you. If you think you will exceed the annual allowance combining all or some of your pension schemes (not just Kent) you should contact us to request the increase in the value of your pension benefits with Kent. Pension schemes are only required to notify you if you exceed the total annual allowance in their scheme therefore you may not receive notification but may still exceed the annual allowance when some or all of your schemes are combined.
If you exceed the annual allowance in any year you are responsible for reporting this to HMRC on your self-assessment tax return. We will be able to tell you how much the value of your scheme benefits have increased during an input period, plus an amount of any Additional Voluntary Contributions (AVCs) you may have paid during the input period.
Annual allowance tax charge
You would only be subject to an annual allowance tax charge if the value of your pension savings in a tax year increases by more than the annual allowance. However, there is a carry forward rule that allows you to carry forward unused annual allowance from the last 3 tax years. This means you can look back at the last 3 tax years to see if you have any unused allowance from these years and if so, you may be able to carry forward the unused allowance and add it to your annual allowance in the current tax year.
For example, if you exceeded the annual allowance by £10,000 in 2023/24 but had unused annual allowance from the last 3 tax years of £15,000, there would be no annual allowance tax charge to pay in this case. It is your responsibility to check whether you have any unused allowance from the last 3 tax years to carry forward.
Most people will not be affected by the annual allowance tax charge because the value of their pension saving will not increase in a tax year by more than the annual allowance or, if it does, they are likely to have unused allowance from previous tax years that can be carried forward.
If you are affected you will be liable to a tax charge (at your marginal income tax rate) on the amount by which the value of your pension savings in the tax year, less any unused allowance from the previous 3 years, exceeds the annual allowance.
If you have an annual allowance tax charge that is more than £2,000 and your pension savings in the scheme alone have increased in the tax year by more than the annual allowance you may be able to opt for the scheme to pay some or all of the tax charge on your behalf. The tax charge would then be recovered from your pension benefits. If you need further information about this option and how it may affect your pension benefits please complete the Annual allowance scheme pays enquiry form.
If you want the scheme to pay some or all of an annual allowance charge you must notify us of this no later than 31 July in the year following the end of the tax year to which the annual allowance charge relates. However, if you are retiring and become entitled to all of your benefits from the scheme and you want the scheme to pay some or all of the tax charge on your behalf from your benefits, you must tell us before you become entitled to those benefits.
Tapered annual allowance for high earners
From the 2023/24 tax year, the AA is tapered for members who had a ‘Threshold Income’ in excess of £200,000, and ‘Adjusted Income’ in excess of £260,000.
‘Threshold Income’ is broadly your taxable income after the deduction of your pension contributions. ‘Adjusted Income’ is broadly your threshold income plus pension savings built up over the tax year. This means that you could exceed the £200,000 threshold even if your salary was below this level.
The taper reduced the AA by £1 for £2 of adjusted income received over £200,000 until a minimum AA of £10,000 was reached.
It is for individuals to calculate whether the taper impacts them and contact us for their Pension Input Amount as this will not automatically be provided.
If you have calculated that you have a tapered annual allowance and want the scheme to pay some or all of an annual allowance charge, you must notify us no later than 15 December immediately following the end of the tax year to which the annual allowance charge relates.
Read the work out your reduced (tapered) annual allowance guidance on the government website to find out more about the tapered allowance.
Further information
GOV.UK provides information about annual allowance. Find out how to work out pension savings and read the pensions tax manual
Use the Annual Allowance (AA) quick check tool for LGPS members. It checks if your LGPS pension saving in a tax year is likely to exceed the AA.
The Local Government Association (LGA) has produced a factsheet about the LGPS and annual allowance. Read the LGA's LGPS annual allowance factsheet (PDF, 210.6 KB)
Use the HMRC annual allowance calculator to check if you have an annual allowance tax charge on your pension savings.
HMRC provide information about when the scheme must pay some or all of the tax for you and when they can choose to do so. Find out who must pay the pensions annual allowance tax charge
The Local Government Association (LGA) has produced a 4 minute video explaining annual allowance. Watch the video about annual allowance