

What was I thinking when I spouted those numbers?jansman wrote: ↑Wed May 18, 2022 6:33 pmSadly, inflation, worldwide, is here for the duration. Ironically, we are at 9%. Back in the 90’s we had 15.25 %. We thought 8% was comfortable! For as long as oil is scarce ( we have 4 million barrels of oil LESS in the world than in 2018 , plus more demand!) money = energy and energy = money. As for pensions; they could be a memory …
You don't have to do anything apart from pay whatever it says on the forecast page. The COPE amount they give you is just for info. I'm offered full whack because I'm paying extra years, as it tells me to. I WOULD HAVE got a smaller pension, by the COPE amount, if I'd not kept paying NI and bought extra years.
I lived in New Zealand for 5 years, will this affect me? I will probably be working till about 65 I reckon, I’m 50 at the moment and have paid into the pot since 18. Ta.Frnc wrote: ↑Wed May 18, 2022 2:01 pm I assume having a pension counts as prepping.
This applies to people aged 45 to 70.
If you've been on a company pension that was contracted out, you might not get the full state pension. Well, if you do nothing, you definitely won't, unless you qualfy for top-up due to hardship.
I retired early. I was told that as I'd paid 25 years National Insurance I'd get my state pension. But what they didn't tell me was I'd need to pay voluntary contributions because I'd been contracted out in the past. Fortunately I found out and have been making payments for a few years. In fact I have paid 42 full years but stilll need to pay 2 more.
Well, apparently that's changing next April. After that you'll only be able to top up going back 6 years.
Getting the full pension, if you can, is a no-brainer as you make a profit (on your NI volutary payments) if you live more than 3 years after collecting your pension.
A year's contribution is £800. This buys you a pension of £275 a year.
The max you can get is about £185 a week. Some people will get topped up due to hardship I think.
More info here
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/lates ... on#pension
This is where you check what you're going to get, wheter you can top up etc
https://www.tax.service.gov.uk/check-yo ... on/account
The weird thing is, my last 6 years are full years and my forecast says I need to pay for 2 more years (taking me to 44 full years). Well, 1 year takes me to next April, so the other year seems to contradict the article.
I'm sorry, I don't know how your time in New Zealand would affect you. Also the changing UK rules affect people differently. All you need to do is click on the link for the government website to see your pension forecast, how many full years NI you've paid, etc. It might also be worth ringing them.Kiwififer wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:06 amI lived in New Zealand for 5 years, will this affect me? I will probably be working till about 65 I reckon, I’m 50 at the moment and have paid into the pot since 18. Ta.Frnc wrote: ↑Wed May 18, 2022 2:01 pm I assume having a pension counts as prepping.
This applies to people aged 45 to 70.
If you've been on a company pension that was contracted out, you might not get the full state pension. Well, if you do nothing, you definitely won't, unless you qualfy for top-up due to hardship.
I retired early. I was told that as I'd paid 25 years National Insurance I'd get my state pension. But what they didn't tell me was I'd need to pay voluntary contributions because I'd been contracted out in the past. Fortunately I found out and have been making payments for a few years. In fact I have paid 42 full years but stilll need to pay 2 more.
Well, apparently that's changing next April. After that you'll only be able to top up going back 6 years.
Getting the full pension, if you can, is a no-brainer as you make a profit (on your NI volutary payments) if you live more than 3 years after collecting your pension.
A year's contribution is £800. This buys you a pension of £275 a year.
The max you can get is about £185 a week. Some people will get topped up due to hardship I think.
More info here
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/lates ... on#pension
This is where you check what you're going to get, wheter you can top up etc
https://www.tax.service.gov.uk/check-yo ... on/account
The weird thing is, my last 6 years are full years and my forecast says I need to pay for 2 more years (taking me to 44 full years). Well, 1 year takes me to next April, so the other year seems to contradict the article.
Ok, will give them a ring. Strange, I never thought I would actually be back or that a missing few years would affect my pension, I best make sure everything is up to date. Thanks for this btw, it’s essential stuff most folk never even consider….Frnc wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:40 amI'm sorry, I don't know how your time in New Zealand would affect you. Also the changing UK rules affect people differently. All you need to do is click on the link for the government website to see your pension forecast, how many full years NI you've paid, etc. It might also be worth ringing them.Kiwififer wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:06 amI lived in New Zealand for 5 years, will this affect me? I will probably be working till about 65 I reckon, I’m 50 at the moment and have paid into the pot since 18. Ta.Frnc wrote: ↑Wed May 18, 2022 2:01 pm I assume having a pension counts as prepping.
This applies to people aged 45 to 70.
If you've been on a company pension that was contracted out, you might not get the full state pension. Well, if you do nothing, you definitely won't, unless you qualfy for top-up due to hardship.
I retired early. I was told that as I'd paid 25 years National Insurance I'd get my state pension. But what they didn't tell me was I'd need to pay voluntary contributions because I'd been contracted out in the past. Fortunately I found out and have been making payments for a few years. In fact I have paid 42 full years but stilll need to pay 2 more.
Well, apparently that's changing next April. After that you'll only be able to top up going back 6 years.
Getting the full pension, if you can, is a no-brainer as you make a profit (on your NI volutary payments) if you live more than 3 years after collecting your pension.
A year's contribution is £800. This buys you a pension of £275 a year.
The max you can get is about £185 a week. Some people will get topped up due to hardship I think.
More info here
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/lates ... on#pension
This is where you check what you're going to get, wheter you can top up etc
https://www.tax.service.gov.uk/check-yo ... on/account
The weird thing is, my last 6 years are full years and my forecast says I need to pay for 2 more years (taking me to 44 full years). Well, 1 year takes me to next April, so the other year seems to contradict the article.
I would try the link first. That way you can see a lot of info in front of you. How much you will get, how many years left to pay for, and a link to your NI years record.
So you contracted out. Under the old rules that Cope anount would have been knocked off your state pension. Under new rules, if you pay extra years NI, you still get the full pension. Your statement will tell you how many years you need to pay in to get the full whack. If you weren't contracted out it would be 35 years. I'm having to pay about 8 years extra because of a Cope estimate of £37 a week. The new rules are beneficial, because I'd rather pay 8 years NI than lose more than half my pension.itsybitsy wrote: ↑Sat Jun 25, 2022 9:55 am So, I had a little look at my pension forecast. I am forecast the maximum state pension - so that's okay. I ALSO have a forecast for COPE, let's say £15.00 per week, just to put a tangible amount on it, which states:
This will not affect your State Pension forecast. The COPE amount is paid as part of your other pension schemes, not by the government.
Does this mean that this COPE forecast is wrapped up into the pension scheme I was paying into when I was contracted out? Because when I checked all the little pots of pension that I've built up over the years in various jobs - not one of them was forecasting a payment of anywhere as high as what my COPE forecast is, which would be around £65.00 per month, using the £15.00 figure I've quoted here.