On 6 April 2024, the Lifetime Allowance (LTA) was fully abolished by the UK Government. This represented a significant change in pension legislation, serving to remove the cap on the tax advantages enjoyed on pension assets accrued over an individual’s life. So, what is the impact of removing the LTA on pension savings?
What was the LTA?
The Lifetime Allowance was a limit on the total value an individual could accrue in pension assets before incurring tax penalties. When the LTA was first introduced in 2006, it was set at £1.5 million, rising to £1.8 million in 2010 before falling back down to £1 million in 2016. Since then, it increased only modestly, reaching £1,073,100 in 2020 before being frozen at this level.[1] Before 6th of April 2024, withdrawing pension savings in excess of the LTA would incur tax charges of:
- 25% if taken as income (with the remainder taxed at the individual’s marginal rate of income tax)
- 55% if taken as a lump sum.
The primary reasons the Government looked to remove the LTA were to encourage economic activity, and to discourage individuals from retiring early for fears of their pension savings breaching this limit (particularly those working in the healthcare sector).[2]