Leicester Mercury

All you need to know about final salary pensions...

- TRICIA PHILLIPS FINANCE EXPERT ANSWERS YOUR MONEY QUESTIONS

WE’VE teamed up with Andrew Tully, technical expert at financial giant Canada Life, to answer some of your recent questions around final salary pensions.

Q

SHOULD I consider transferri­ng my final salary/ defined benefit pension? A

THERE is a basic rule of thumb which suggests you should only consider transferri­ng your final salary pension in very limited circumstan­ces – usually if you are very ill – although people have been keen to utilise the pension freedoms for more flexibilit­y by moving away from DB pensions.

Q

CAN I transfer funds without taking advice? A

ONLY in limited circumstan­ces, if your pension has a transfer value of less than £30,000. As it’s a big decision, any transfer worth more than £30,000 will require you to get fully regulated advice provided by a specialist.

Q

CAN I change my mind about my pension transfer once enacted? A

NO. THIS is a once-in-a-lifetime decision and can’t be reversed, hence the extra checks and balances in place to ensure it is right for you, if you do decide to explore transferri­ng.

Q

HOW much does it cost to transfer and how long does it take? A

FINAL salary pension transfers are complex and an adviser will spend time understand­ing your financial plans, goals and attitude to risk. This will take into considerat­ion all of your individual circumstan­ces, your needs throughout retirement as well as other savings and wealth, and therefore is thorough and will take time.

A typical adviser could charge in the region of £3,500 to provide the advice, alongside an ongoing fee to manage the money later.

Given the complexiti­es, and the fact it is a specialise­d area of pensions advice, not all advisers are regulated to provide this.

A transfer can also take months to go through.

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