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Confused about your cash? Need to know your rights? Think you’ve been ripped off? i’s financial agony uncle is here to help As a retired couple, do we need to pay tax on our savings?

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QI am retired, but as a fairly lowpaid and part-time worker who never paid the full national insurance contributi­ons, my pension is small. I am therefore exempt from paying tax on savings and so over the years our joint savings (my husband’s and mine) have always been in my name.

We have now built up a good sum, so much so I wonder if this should be declared to HMRC. My husband is 90 and I am 85 and we don’t want to be seen as fraudulent. This is worrying me so I would be glad for your guidance.

Helen

AThank you so much for this question, Helen. A lot of pensioners are having similar concerns. Please do not worry about being seen as fraudsters. First, I think it is highly unlikely that you owe any tax on your savings interest. Second, if you do, then it is up to HMRC to contact you. If you have not had a letter from HMRC, you can assume you do not owe money.

In the past, most pensioners did not need to worry about paying tax on savings interest. But two things have changed.

Firstly, the interest rate paid on savings has shot up from almost zero to as much as 5 per cent a year. Secondly, the state pension has risen substantia­lly over the past couple of years. The new state pension – which you are too old to get – is now £11,500 a year, not far off the threshold where income tax begins, at £12,570.

So many pensioners worry that they may have to pay tax on their interest. However, three rules make that very unlikely if your other income is low.

The first £1,000 a year of interest earned on savings is free of tax for most people, except high earners. This is known as the personal savings allowance.

Even if your savings earn as much as 5 per cent, you would need £20,000 in the bank to exceed that savings allowance. The allowance is reduced for higher-rate taxpayers but that does not apply to you.

The second is the “starter rate for savings interest”, which means some people can earn even more from savings interest without paying any tax. It applies to people whose total income is below £17,570 a year. If your income from pensions and other sources is no more than £12,570 a year, then the starter rate applies to the first £5,000 savings interest above that. If your other income is between those two amounts it applies to the difference.

So if your other income is £15,570 the starter rate applies to £17,570 to £15,570 which equals £2,000.

On top of that you can add the £1,000 personal savings allowance. So up to £6,000 of savings interest is free of income tax. Even with interest rates at 5 per cent, that means interest on £120,000 can be free of tax.

Thirdly, if your other income is less than £12,570, the gap between your income and that amount is also tax-free.

For example, say someone has a small state pension of only £100 a week or £5,200 a year. She has £12,570 as a starter rate for interest, leaving her with £7,370 tax allowance left. That is the first tax-free amount of interest. On top of that she has the £5,000 starter rate for savings and the £1,000 savings allowance, meaning that a total of £13,370 interest could be free of tax.

Even on an account paying 5 per cent, that would mean no tax was due on the interest from £267,400 in her savings account. Interest of a quarter of a million tax-free! Though I should add if her interest did exceed £10,000 in a year, she would have to fill in a self-assessment form.

You and your husband sensibly made sure that you – the non-taxpayer – own most of your savings. Moving money between spouses can be done without worrying about other taxes – though you have to trust each other.

If you are not married or in a civil partnershi­p, there may be inheritanc­e tax due when the giver dies if you move more than £3,000 a year to your partner. The answer to that is to live at least seven years after making the gift, as it then drops out of the inheritanc­e-tax calculatio­n. If your savings are enormous and income tax is due on them, then a taxpayer will find that the tax code for their earnings or company pension is adjusted automatica­lly by HMRC. Banks and building societies report interest paid to HMRC so it can collect any tax due on interest by taking more tax from that other income. A non-taxpayer who owes tax on savings interest will be contacted by HMRC and sent a simple assessment form showing how much tax they should pay and how to do so.

If you have not had a letter you can assume you do not owe tax. More informatio­n is available at gov.uk/simple-assessment. Finally, Helen, do remember your savings are there to give you and your husband the best final years you can have. Please don’t hoard them for ever.

 ?? ?? A lifetime of saving can lead to fears of a tax penalty on the interest, but this is unlikely when other income is low
A lifetime of saving can lead to fears of a tax penalty on the interest, but this is unlikely when other income is low
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