Workplace pensions

Workplace Pensions

We can provide expert guidance on plan selection and regulatory compliance, ensuring a tailored and effective retirement benefit programme for your employees.

Speak to us:  01603 967967

The pension options available from employers vary greatly. We can help you to make sense of this.
If you are an employee you may have been in more than one pension scheme during your career and it can be challenging establishing how much is in each of them and what your options are.

If you are an employer you may already offer a pension to your employees and could be considering reviewing this to make sure it is the best option. If you do not currently offer a pension to your employees, you may want to visit our automatic enrolment page to find out more about your requirements as an employer.

The Alan Boswell Group Difference

We aim to build long-term relationships between our clients and our qualified independent financial advisers. Whether you are an employee or an employer, our advisers will take the time to get to know you and your objectives and to help you establish the most appropriate pension solution.

Adviser for Workplace pensions

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Corporate pensions in detail

Group personal pensions

An employer can help set up a pension arrangement that groups together individual personal pension plans known as a group personal pension plan. It has the advantage over individual arrangements in that the employer often pays into the plan and they can also negotiate special terms with the provider such as reduced costs or flexible contributions. On leaving employment, although any employer contributions would cease, the member can continue the policy on their own.

Small self administered schemes (SSAS)

This is an occupational pension scheme with less than 12 members which administers its own investments. It is usually set up by directors who tend to also be the trustees. There are HM Revenue & Customs restrictions on trusteeship and investments. The attraction of SSASs is the ability for trustee members to manage their own investments such as holding their own commercial premises used by the company in their pension fund, holding company shares, and giving loans back to the company.

Group stakeholder pensions

This type of policy is similar to a group personal pension plan but is a group of stakeholder pension plans, meaning there are certain limits on what can be charged and the minimum contribution, set by the Government. The employer can contribute to the policy and they can negotiate special terms with the provider such as reduced costs and flexible contributions.

Executive pension schemes

Executive pension schemes are often set up for an individual director or a small group of them. They tend to be money purchase plans with HM Revenue & Customs set limits on the income received, tax-free cash, and life cover. Employers and directors have often used this type of pension as a tax efficient way of passing the company’s profits to owners/directors.

Occupational pensions

These are schemes set up by an employer for the benefit of employees and directors. The employer will make contributions on behalf of the employee which they can add to. Some companies state that for an employee to join their scheme they have to make a minimum level of contributions. There are two main types:

  • Final salary (or defined benefit) – They are promised a pension in the future based on your level of service and salary at retirement or the date of leaving the scheme. The amount of pension promised may be lower if the employee leaves before the set normal retirement date or the scheme closes before then.

  • Money purchase (or defined contribution) – The amount of benefits in retirement depends on the contributions paid. The premiums are paid into a fund which grows depending on the level of returns from the underlying investments and the amount deducted in charges from the fund (in a similar way to if the premiums were paid into a personal or stakeholder pension).

The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up and you might not get back the original amount invested. The past is not a guide to the future.

The value of tax benefits depends on your individual circumstances and the laws concerning these can change.

Employee FAQs

Employers FAQs

Get in touch

To find out more, ask a question, or make an appointment to speak to one of our advisers, please get in touch.

Speak to us:  01603 967967