The Irish State Pension is worked out on average contributions paid. If you started paying into the Irish system in 1997, and have full contributions each year, you should qualify for a full state pension here (as well as the UK one).
You have to have at least 520 contributions paid, which you have, and at least 260 of those compulsory, not voluntary. As you couldn't have been paying voluntary contributions to both UK and Ireland at the same time it sounds as though you have at least 97 to 2012 (15 years) compulsory paid.
Currently you have 16 years paid (if you've paid 2013) which is 16 x 52 = 832 contributions. If you stop now, that will be an average of 46.2 over the 18 years.
If you want a full Irish pension, do not stop paying Prsi yet.
I have 17 x 52 paid including 2013 (which I haven't paid yet but inevitably will) and there'll be another due anyway for 2014, which makes 18 years. Is that an average of 52 then, or am I misunderstanding the method of calculation.
I might be wrong but I think this is whats key here, I don't think just taking 18yrs of paid contributions on their own is a correct way to calculate entitlement.How do I calculate my ‘Yearly Average’?
Count your number of contribution years, beginning with the year you first started paying social insurance up to and including the last full contribution year before you reach age 66. Call this ‘Total Contribution Years’.
Right - thanks. Does that mean if I'd started work here in 2007 and paid 52 stamps a year until 2017 (10/10 years) I'd be entitled to a full pension, whereas if I arrived in 1997 and paid 52 a year until 2014 (17/20 years) I wouldn't? That seems unfair, but I'm just trying to understand the basic logic of the calculations.
I did contact the Dept of Social Protection about my pension a while back but all they were prepared to do was send me my PRSI record and refer me to the (to me, incomprehensible) calculations table. I do find it annoying when Brits who come to live here whinge on about how much better everything is in the UK, but I have to say that in contrast the Pensions people in Newcastle could not have been more helpful.
Anyway, thanks everyone for your help and advice. I understand the calculation much better now. It looks like I'll need one more year of PRSI after this one - so 2014, then 2015 - to give me an average of over 48 and a full state pension.
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