HomeFinance250,000 pensioners hit with...

250,000 pensioners hit with four-figure ‘retirement tax’ bills

A quarter of a million retirees are paying over £1,000 of income tax on their state pension, figures show.

Current government policy means rising state pensions are on track to collide with frozen income tax thresholds – leaving millions more retirees liable for tax bills in the next decade.

Former prime minister, Rishi Sunak, dubbed the phenomenon “Labour’s retirement tax”.

But Telegraph analysis shows around 249,000 retirees are already paying at least £1,000 of tax on their state pension income alone, while 10,700 pay over £2,000.

The six individuals with the highest state pension payments of between £43,680 and £44,200 a year pay over £6,200 in income tax.

The Telegraph analysed figures from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) up to May 2024, which is the most recently available data.

Rachel Reeves has committed to keeping the threshold at which people start paying income tax frozen at £12,570 until 2027-28.

A “full” new state pension pays £11,502 a year. However, Britain’s complex pension system means some over 2.6 million people already receive a state pension above the “personal allowance” limit.

Most pensioners draw some retirement income from private pensions on top of the state pension, meaning their total income tax bill is likely to be even higher.

Income tax thresholds were frozen until at least 2027-28 under the Tories. This deep-freeze helped to push an extra 2.5 million pensioners into the tax net during the party’s 14 years in power. The Chancellor said she would maintain the freeze in her October Budget.

Meanwhile, the state pension “triple lock” ensures that payments rise each year by the highest of inflation, average earnings or 2.5pc.

Rising payments and frozen thresholds mean the “full” new state pension is on course to exceed the personal allowance within the next three years.

The Tories had promised in their election manifesto to avoid the issue via its “triple lock plus” policy whereby pensioners’ tax-free allowance would rise in-line with growing state pensions.

At the time, Labour said the plans were not “credible”.

Sir Steve Webb, a former pensions minister, now a partner at pension consultants LCP, said: “With tax thresholds frozen year after year alongside state pension rises totalling over 20pc in the last three years, a rapidly increasing number of pensioners are being dragged into the tax net and those who pay tax are having to pay more and more tax each year”.

The state pension is paid to nearly 13 million retirees, around 4.2 million of whom are on the new state pension, introduced in 2016.

The rest receive the old state pension, the “basic” element of which is currently £8,798 a year – nearly £3,000 less than the new state pension.

But once additional entitlements are taken into account, the old system can be far more lucrative than the new.

Those earning higher state pension payments will be drawing money from an additional earnings-related pension, commonly known as Serps, for a maximum of £11,356 a year.

Delaying the start date for drawing the old state pension raises the starting amount by a further 10.4pc for each year deferred. By deferring for 13 years, a pensioner could push their annual income to over £45,000.

An HM Treasury spokesman said: “Older people should be able to live with the dignity and respect they deserve, and the state pension is the foundation for this. We are committed to the triple lock, and pensioners whose sole income is the new state pension and who have not deferred or receive protected payments do not pay any income tax.”

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Most Popular

More from Author

Chanel Ties Paris Fashion Week Up With a Bow

Long before the “bow girl,” in all her coquettecore glory, became a fashion...

Miu Miu Was Cool-Girl Catnip

Miu Miu has a knack for bringing It girls not just...

Saint Laurent Solidifies the Season of the Big Shoulder

There was one big thing that united Saint Laurent’s winter 2025...

Reading Festival organisers quizzed over waste

The organisers of one of the UK's largest music festivals have...

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Read Now

Chanel Ties Paris Fashion Week Up With a Bow

Long before the “bow girl,” in all her coquettecore glory, became a fashion archetype, there was Chanel. This morning at Paris Fashion Week, the French house wrapped the Grand Palais in a massive black ribbon to celebrate one of its most beloved motifs. (One which dates back to the...

Miu Miu Was Cool-Girl Catnip

Miu Miu has a knack for bringing It girls not just to the front row, but onto the runway. Today at Paris Fashion Week, the former group included Sydney Sweeney, Nara Smith, Alix Earle, and Renée Rapp. (And at least one It guy: A$AP Rocky.) At the Palais D’Iéna, the walls had...

Saint Laurent Solidifies the Season of the Big Shoulder

There was one big thing that united Saint Laurent’s winter 2025 collection: huge, powerful shoulders. Models paraded around the perimeter of a large oval onyx floor wearing every single version of the massive shoulder. They appeared on ’80s power-suit-style dresses in vibrant colors, oversized outerwear, and even...

Reading Festival organisers quizzed over waste

The organisers of one of the UK's largest music festivals have been grilled over the tonnes of waste and tents that are left behind each year. Reading Festival attracts tens of thousands of people to Little John's Farm in the Berkshire town on the August bank holiday weekend...

Ray Meade: ‘When they told me I had MS, I thought I was done’

Like most of us, guitarist Raymond Meade had a slow and quiet summer in 2021. The pandemic had put a stop to live touring with Ocean Colour Scene, with whom he had played since 2016. And without recording studios, he was unable to continue with his successful solo career. But...

Oasis sale ‘may have misled fans’ says watchdog

Ticketmaster "may have misled Oasis fans" with unclear pricing when it put their reunion tour on sale last year, the UK's competition watchdog has said. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said the company may have breached consumer protection law by selling "platinum" tickets for almost 2.5 times...

Window cleaner in quest to confirm priceless Shakespeare portrait

Window cleaner Steven Wadlow has spent more than a decade trying to prove he is in possession of a priceless, authentic Shakespeare portrait. His quest is now being told in a Netflix documentary. What is the story behind the find? Steven, who lives in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, said his...

What is the Signal messaging app and how secure is it?

The free messaging app Signal has made headlines after the White House confirmed it was used for a secret group chat between senior US officials. The editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, was inadvertently added to the group where plans for a strike against the Houthi group in...

Papua New Guinea blocks Facebook to ‘limit’ fake news and porn

Papua New Guinea has blocked access to Facebook in what authorities call a "test" to limit hate speech, misinformation and pornography. The sudden ban, which started on Monday, has drawn criticism from opposition MPs and political critics, who called it a violation of human rights. Defending the move, Police...

Bollywood actress vindicated over boyfriend’s death after media hounding

Bollywood actress Rhea Chakraborty was called "a gold digger" and "a murderer". She was slut-shamed and spent 27 days in prison after a hate-filled vicious media campaign in 2020 alleged she had been involved in the death of her actor boyfriend Sushant Singh Rajput. Now, India's federal investigators...

UK Detects First Case of Bird Flu in a Sheep, Stoking Fears of Spread

LONDON, March 24 (Reuters) - Bird flu has been detected in a sheep in northern England, the first known case of its kind in the world, Britain’s government said, adding to the growing list of mammals infected by the disease and fueling fears of a pandemic. Many different...

Half of family-run businesses cancel investments as tax grab looms

More than half of family-run businesses and farms have paused or ditched investments as they scramble to cut costs ahead of Rachel Reeves’s inheritance tax (IHT) raid, data shows. More than 55pc of businesses surveyed by Family Business UK and CBI Economics said they had cancelled investments or...