Draw a bigger income from your pension pot


Updated on 27 March 2009 | 0 Comments

If you are prepared to risk leaving your pension invested in the stock market, you can enjoy an annual income which could be hundreds of pounds higher than you would get from the best annuity.

Unsecured pension (USP) - or income drawdown - allows you to draw an income directly from your pension fund, without the need to buy an annuity. (An annuity converts your pension fund into a guaranteed income for the rest of your life,)

I can hear a huge cheer from those of you who hate the idea of sacrificing your pension pot to an annuity company and being stuck with low annuity rates for the rest of your lives. Clearly, USP sounds like the perfect solution. But is it?

How does USP work?

With USP, your pension fund remains invested in the hope of providing more capital growth in the future. The idea is that the fund performs well enough to provide you with a better income than you would have got from an annuity. (You still have the option of taking up to 25% of the pension as tax-free cash, just as you would with an annuity).

Many people use USP for a time, before buying an annuity with the remaining pension fund later on. This is because you can only leave your money invested in your pension until the age of 75.

But if you want to, after you turn 75, you can still avoid buying an annuity by choosing an Alternatively Secured Pension (ASP) instead. ASP is broadly similar to USP. It enables you to carry on taking an income from your invested pension fund far into your retirement.

The income you take from USP is subject to limits set by the Government Actuary's Department (GAD). GAD limits generally allow you to take up to 120% of the income that would typically be provided by a conventional annuity for someone of your age, gender and pension fund. You can vary the income you take between zero and the maximum as required.

Confused? The key fact to bear in mind is that, if you want to, you are allowed to draw down an income which can be as much as 20% higher than you would get from a typical annuity.

USP income withdrawals

Let's assume you have a pension pot of £100,000 which you move into USP. The table below shows how much income you could draw down, based on current GAD limits, as well as your age and gender:

Gender

Age

Maximum annual income

Male

60

£7,200

Female

60

£6,840

Male

65

£8,160

Female

65

£7,560

Male

70

£9,600

Female

70

£8,640

The maximum income a male, age 65, can draw from USP is currently £8,160 a year. But if he chose the very best conventional annuity available on the market today, he would get an income of just £7,375 a year. So, with USP he could be up to £785 better off every year.

Still, this is only around 11% higher than the annuity. Where's the missing 9%? 

Unfortunately, the maximum income GAD allows you to take is 120% of a typical annuity, as calculated by the GAD boffins, for someone of your age, gender and pension pot. So you won't necessarily be able to draw down 120% of the absolute best available annuity you can find. But you should still be able to draw a significantly larger income from your pot with USP, than if you use that pot to buy an annuity.

So, we've looked at how USP works and got a feel for the amount of income it might provide. But is USP really better than an annuity? Let's take a look at more of the pros and cons:

The advantages of USP

The disadvantages of USP

Is USP for me?

That's quite a lot of pros and cons to mull over. But think about this: USP is really only suitable if you have a pretty large pension pot to start with. That's because of the investment risks involved and the charges for setting up and running the plan. Typically, USP is only used by people with pensions of around £100,000 who don't need the certainty of a guaranteed income.

So, particularly if you have other sources of capital to pay for your retirement, you may decide the potential for an improved income from USP is worth the gamble. If, however, you're one of the many, many people who have a far smaller pension pot and you need a fail-safe income for life, I think an annuity is still a more suitable and secure choice for you.

More: Why printing money is bad news for pensioners | Twenty years of DIY pensions | Read more retirement and pensions articles at lovemoney.com.

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