Des Pondent
Registered User
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No PRSI when you're over 65??If you claim the state pension at 66, and continue working, will you pay tax, PRSI and USC at your marginal rate ?
You would need to take that into account when calculating the payback if you were to defer.
I'm making an assumption that you would pay no tax on the pension if not working.
No PRSI when you're over 65??
Ultimately, for those who qualify for a full pension at 66, it might come down to whether or not you think you’ll live long enough to benefit in full from it. Some people have criticised the rates of payment, arguing that you’d have to live to at least 86 in order to enjoy the full benefit of deferring your pension. However, if you are going to keep working, tax will eat into your payments, which can affect this calculation.
“You’re taking a bet against your own longevity .... The later you retire, the less time on average you would expect to have to collect the pension.”
If you claim the state pension at 66, and continue working, will you pay tax, PRSI and USC at your marginal rate ?
From 1 January 2024, employers will need to know whether their employee, who is aged between 66 and 70 and born after 1 January 1958, has been awarded the State Pension (Contributory) to assign the appropriate PRSI class.
Therefore, employers will need to confirm with any of their employees who are aged between 66 and 70 and born after 1 January 1958, whether they have been awarded the State Pension (Contributory). When a person is awarded the State Pension (Contributory) the letter from the Department of Social Protection advises them that if they continue to work after being awarded their State Pension (Contributory) it is important to inform their employer they are in receipt of State Pension (Contributory) to ensure they do not pay PRSI.
PRSI: That depends! See the following: https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/70400-changes-to-pay-related-social-insurance-prsi/
It's moving from 1st January 2025 over 10 years to the new Total contribution model. Were after that ever single prsi week counts to the percentage of the full pension. Need 2080 for full amount and only 520 can be credited contributions used for the equation.That's interesting. Someone who continues to work after 66 and NOT draw down their State Contributory Pension continues to pay PRSI. I assume this is to enable someone who is falling a year or two short on their PRSI record to make it up to a full pension. But it's a bit unfair to someone who chooses to continue to work after 66 and NOT draw down their State Contributory Pension because they want to get the increased amount, i.e. someone who already has 40 years' PRSI by age 66.
It's moving from 1st January 2025 over 10 years to the new Total contribution model. Were after that ever single prsi week counts to the percentage of the full pension. Need 2080 for full amount and only 520 can be credited contributions used for the equation.
I agree currently it's makes sense to drawn down old age pension at 66 if you got the full 2080. Even if you continue to work after 66.Yes - 2,080 contributions is 40 years. I find it interesting that someone who already has their 40 years at age 66 but chooses to continue to work and not draw their SC pension will still be paying PRSI while someone who chooses at 66 to work and draw their SC pension will not pay PRSI.
This is being changed in January. PRSI will only be zero rated for those under 70 who drawdown the State Contrib Pension.No PRSI when you're over 65??
I contacted DSP last year (I was 64 at the time) to ask if, based on my contribution history, current circumstances etc. I would receive the Over 65 payment and in due course the Contributory Pension. The response was somewhere between derisory and positively hostile. It ended with a statement that it was not the Department's policy to speculate on possible future entitlements and if I wanted to know whether I would receive these payments I should apply at the appropriate time and my application would be assessed.The UK system of getting an actual forecast is a much better service than is operated here. The Gov should be working to bring clarity to a fundamental element of retirement rather than allowing an opaque system continue as is. I accept that our system has become more complicated over time and that the principle that the dept will check multiple calculations to find the one most beneficial is positive.
There could be an employment opportunity for specialist state contributory pension advisers, to figure out all the possible pension qualification and continuing working beyond 66 plans for the next 11 years.
That's a very disappointing attitude to have encountered. My experience of dealing by phone with a few different government departments has been largely positive where attitude is concerned. Admittedly the baseline has not been very high in the past. Knowledge seems to be slowly improving as is the quality and extent of online information on Gov.ie.I contacted DSP last year (I was 64 at the time) to ask if, based on my contribution history, current circumstances etc. I would receive the Over 65 payment and in due course the Contributory Pension. The response was somewhere between derisory and positively hostile. It ended with a statement that it was not the Department's policy to speculate on possible future entitlements and if I wanted to know whether I would receive these payments I should apply at the appropriate time and my application would be assessed.
@S class You are hereby nominated for the position.
Being just shy of 2080 at age 66 is a very strong position to be in. Depending on what “just shy” means it may mean you can ignore the average method. This simplifies matters significantly. If you know or forecast what the exact total of PRSI contributions will be then your pension will be a pro-rata amount based the full notional pension amount, currently €277. In practice that means divide €277 by 2080 and multiply by your number of PRSI contributions at age 66. That’s your weekly pension amount based on current rates and rules. One word of caution…. I think I read somewhere that PRSI contributions in the year that your claim your pension are disregarded. Small impact if born in January, bigger for December.Here in Germany I get a forecast of my expected state pension in the post every year or two. They start sending these out automatically once you are 40 I think. Even if I get a statement of PRSI contributions I can't be at all sure of my Irish forecast because of opaque things like pre-entry credits. I am in the position of likely being just shy of the 2080 contributions at age 66 so I will want to defer my COAP a little while, but with the above attitude by the DSP how will I even know how long I need to defer for?!
As we move towards the TCA I really hope this opaqueness comes to an end and we all know in advance exactly how short we are etc.
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