Some members have the right to take benefits before minimum pension age. Here we review the three categories of members with these rights, along with the conditions affecting them.
On 6 April 2010, the normal minimum pension age increased from 50 to 55. Ordinarily, there are only three occasions when benefits may be taken earlier than these ages – ill health retirement, serious ill health retirement (both of which are covered in our article When can retirement benefits be taken?) and where an individual has a protected pension age.
We’ll look at the three categories of members with the right to take benefits before minimum pension age, along with the conditions affecting them.
Where the conditions are met, the protected pension age applies to all benefits the member can take under the scheme, including benefits without an unqualified right (covered below), new benefits introduced after 5 April 2006 and any benefits in respect of a transfer into the registered pension scheme.
The three categories of members with the right to take benefits before minimum pension age are:
These categories don’t include:
These members aren’t normally* eligible for a protected pension age.
*some FSAVC scheme rules may have an unqualified right to take benefits early depending on the interaction with the normal retirement date of the main scheme.
This protection covers members of retirement benefit schemes and Section 32 policies who had, at 5 April 2006, a right to take pension benefits from age 50 onwards. This right could be protected after 6 April 2010.
The following criteria must be met in order for these rights to be protected:
On 10 December 2003 the scheme rules stated that a member may take benefits before age 55 without anyone’s permission, if they were made redundant. Therefore, any member made redundant after 6 April 2006 who is aged over 50 but under 55 may take their benefits without breaching the minimum pension age rule.
If the scheme rules state that the trustees’ and / or the employer’s permission is required before benefits can be taken, then this is not an unqualified right and the members are not entitled to protect their early pension age.
See Finance Act 2004 Schedule 36 Paragraphs 21 & 22
Before 6 April 2006, some people with a prescribed occupation (such as footballers, athletes, divers etc) who took out retirement annuity contracts and / or personal pensions had a right to take pension and / or lump sum benefits before they were 50.
In order to protect this right, these people had to meet two conditions:
Any individual who protects their pension age on this basis may have reduced allowances if they take benefits before reaching age 50.
See Finance Act 2004 Schedule 36 Paragraphs 21 & 23 & Reg 3 The Registered Pension Schemes (Prescribed Schemes and Occupations) Regulations 2005 – SI 2005/3451
Before A-Day (6 April 2006), certain professions (normally sports people or those in dangerous occupations) were granted normal retirement ages below age 50. Again, this right could be protected if all of the following conditions are met:
Any individual who protects their pension age on this basis may have reduced allowances if they take benefits before reaching age 50.
See Finance Act 2004 Schedule 36 Paras 21 & 22
Any member protecting their pension age under categories 2 and 3 above may have reduced allowances. This is because they were entitled to take benefits before age 50, and it’s also why this condition doesn’t apply to members protecting their pension age under category 1, as their entitlement only started at age 50.
Those members in category 2 or 3 who are also members of a prescribed scheme will not have reduced allowances.
Benefits from certain pension schemes may be paid without the member being subject to a reduced lump sum allowance. These schemes are:
The Registered Pension Schemes (Prescribed Schemes and Occupations) Regulations 2005 – SI 2005/3451
Where the reduction applies, the individual's allowances will be reduced by 2.5% for each complete year between the date the RBCE occurs and the date the person reaches age 55.
You can find more detailed information of the allowances relevant to this section in our Lump Sum Allowance and Lump Sum and Death Benefit Allowance articles.
When someone with a protected pension age takes their benefits, they must become entitled to all the benefits under the scheme on the same day. This condition also applies if there has been a block transfer (see below). The receiving scheme must be able to crystallise all uncrystallised rights on the same day to allow the protected pension age to apply.
If this person dies within six months of payment of the tax-free cash (pension commencement lump sum) but before becoming entitled to the pension, then this condition will still be met.
Where a person has at least two of:
under the same scheme, then the condition will only be met if the person becomes entitled to all benefits within a six-month period, starting with the entitlement to the first pension. If the person becomes entitled to at least one type of pension and dies within six months, then the condition would be met as long as the scheme administrator believed the person had been entitled to all pensions under the scheme within the six-month period.
There is no requirement for benefits to be taken at the protected pension age, just that (if taken before normal minimum pension age) they must all be taken on the same day. If benefits are delayed, any reduced allowances would be calculated at the actual crystallisation date (ie not at the protected pension age).
It should be noted that these rules apply at a scheme level and not an arrangement level. Depending on the category of protected pension age, a scheme may be designed so that it contains some benefits payable to a person before the normal minimum pension age (because they qualify for protection) and some benefits payable to that person only after having reached normal minimum pension age.
If all benefits are not crystallised, payments from the partially crystallised benefits would be unauthorised member payments (UP) and taxed as such. To avoid any UP, the client cannot phase retirement benefits in the existing scheme between their protected early pension age and the normal minimum pension age. Once the member reaches normal minimum pension age, the option to phase retirement is available (as the member is then not relying on their protected early pension age to take their benefits).
See Finance Act 2004 Schedule 36 Paragraphs 22(7)(a) & 23(7)
Articles 42 & 43 The Taxation of Pension Schemes (Transitional Provisions) Order 2006 – SI 2006/572 and Pensions Tax Manual PTM062200
The protected pension age could be lost in certain circumstances:
For category 1 members (protected early pension age from age 50), this restriction applies only where:
The employers are:
'Connected' is defined in s993 to 995 Income Tax Act 2007 and further guidance can be found in PTM027000
The re-employment conditions are:
If any of the four re-employment conditions apply, protection won’t be lost.
For category 2 or 3 members (protected early pension age before age 50), protection is only lost if they are employed by a sponsoring employer in the scheme under which benefit entitlement arose and the- individual is 'connected' (see above) to that sponsoring employer.
See Finance Act 2004 Schedule 36 Para 22(7)(b) & 22(7B) -(7J)
Pension Taxation Manual PTM062230
A protected pension age is only retained if the transfer is part of a block transfer.
In respect of protected pension age, protection will remain in the event of a block transfer. A transfer is a block transfer if:
Since 6 April 2015, for pensions in payment the definition of block transfers for protected pension ages is where there is a recognised transfer from one registered pension scheme ("the old scheme") to another registered pension scheme ("the new scheme"), and there is a transfer in a single transaction of all accrued (vested) rights which relate to the member. This does not have to happen on the same day, as there could be administrative reasons preventing this. In other words, there’s no requirement for a ‘buddy’.
See Finance Act 2004 Schedule 36 paragraphs 21-23AA protected pension age is only retained if the transfer is part of a block transfer.
The Pension Schemes (Transfer, Re-organisation and Winding Up) (Transitional Provisions) Order 2006 provides for protection of low normal retirement ages on both TUPE transfers and the reorganisation of a sponsoring employer’s pension schemes between 10 December 2003 and 5 April 2006, providing strict conditions are met. These regulations also provide for protection due to scheme wind-up, where benefits are secured under deferred annuities, whether the wind-up commenced before or from 6 April 2006.
See Articles 13-16 The Pension Schemes (Transfers, Reorganisations and Winding Up) (Transitional Provisions) Order 2006 - SI 2006/573
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