PTM133850 - Unauthorised payments: deemed or specific situations that are unauthorised payments: recycling of pension commencement lump sums: examples to illustrate when the recycling rule applies

Glossary PTM000001

Please note that the examples that follow are just that - examples. This list is not and cannot be comprehensive. Each case will need to be decided on its own facts and merits to establish whether or not all of the requirements set out in the bullet points at PTM133810 have been met. It is only where they have all been met that recycling will have occurred.

Example 1 - Paying the pension commencement lump sum as a contribution

A 57-year-old member of a registered pension scheme has built up a pot of £100,000 in a money purchase arrangement. The member has earnings of £75,000. The member is making contributions amounting to 10% of those earnings to another registered pension scheme in respect of a pensionable employment. The only other asset of note that the member has is the member’s family home, which is mortgaged. The member draws a pension commencement lump sum of £25,000 from his £100,000 pot, which is fully covered by lifetime allowance.

The member pays an immediate contribution of £25,000 into a registered pension scheme. The member is able to claim higher rate relief in respect of all of the contributions of £32,500 that the member makes in the tax year. Where the member had the intention at the time of taking the pension commencement lump sum of using that lump sum to make additional contributions, those contributions would be regarded as triggering the recycling rule. There would be an unauthorised payment of £25,000.

Example 2 - Aggregation of pension commencement lump sums paid at different times

An individual takes a pension commencement lump sum of £9,000 on 1 May 2013 with the intention of using it to pay significantly greater contributions to a registered pension scheme. This is the first time the individual has taken such a lump sum. The standard lifetime allowance in this particular year is £1,500,000. The amount of the lump sum does not exceed 1% of the standard lifetime allowance (£15,000 - 1% of £1,500,000) and no other such lump sums were paid to the individual in the last 12 months. The recycling rule is not triggered because the amount of the pension commencement lump sum is less than 1% of the standard lifetime allowance (for this tax year this amount is £15,000 - 1% of £1,500,000).

On 1 November 2013 the same individual takes another pension commencement lump sum of £7,000 in order to further significantly increase contributions to a registered pension scheme. The total significantly increased contributions amount to £7,000. Because the individual has received another pension commencement lump sum within the previous 12 months (the lump sum of £9,000 taken on 1 May), the amount of the later lump sum of £7,000 must be aggregated with the amount of that previous lump sum. The aggregate amount exceeds 1% of the standard lifetime allowance (for this tax year this amount is £15,000 - 1% of £1,500,000) (£9,000 + £7,000 = £16,000). The recycling rule is triggered because:

  • the individual specifically took the pension commencement lump sum of £7,000 in order to pay £7,000 back into a registered pension scheme as a tax relievable contribution
  • that lump sum of £7,000 (together with the earlier lump sum of £9,000) exceeds 1% of the standard lifetime allowance (for this tax year this amount is £15,000 - 1% of £1,500,000)
  • the amount of the significantly increased contribution (£7,000) exceeds 30% of the pension commencement lump sum of £7,000 (£7,000 x 30% = £2,100).

The recycling rule applies to the second lump sum, resulting in a deemed unauthorised payment of £7,000.

Example 3 - Other money available when pension commencement lump sum used to fund increase in contributions

An individual intends to use a pension commencement lump sum of £35,000 that he is able to take from a registered pension scheme to fund a significantly greater contribution of £40,000 to another registered pension scheme in the run-up to the end of the tax year. The individual has more than £40,000 available savings and so could make that contribution using those savings, but to do so would mean using up most of those savings, and so he instead takes the £35,000 pension commencement lump sum and uses that. The fact that the individual had other available money that could have funded the significantly greater contribution does not mean the recycling rule is avoided.

The recycling rule would also apply if, instead of funding the contribution directly from the lump sum, the individual takes the money that pays the contribution out of the available savings and then uses the £35,000 pension commencement lump sum to replenish those savings. A short-term loan in anticipation of the lump sum to repay it would be treated similarly.

Despite paying the increased contributions from existing savings, the recycling rule is triggered because the individual always intended the pension commencement lump sum to be an integral aspect of providing the means, albeit in an indirect way, to pay those increased contributions.

The significantly greater contribution is made ‘because of’ the pension commencement lump sum, and this was planned by the individual from the outset.

But it is not enough to establish that recycling has occurred for the pension commencement lump sum to be paid into the same bank account as that from which the savings were taken to pay the increased contributions. This does not of itself mean that the contributions have been made ‘because of’ the lump sum. HMRC has to show that the individual intended to use the lump sum as the indirect means of making those increased contributions.

Example 4 - Illustration of a significant increase in contributions

A member’s annual contributions to registered pension schemes have been £20,000 a year for the last 10 years. In the year in which a pension commencement lump sum is received, the contributions are £30,000. The member took the lump sum with the prior intention of using it to make significantly greater contributions to a registered pension scheme.

Based on the previous 10 years, the amount of contributions that might have been expected is £20,000. So, there is a significant increase in contributions as the increase of £10,000 is more than 30% of the amount that would have been expected in that year (the limit is reached where the amount of the increase in contributions - £10,000 - exceeds £20,000 x 30% = £6,000).

Example 5 - salary sacrifice type arrangements

An employee intends to receive a pension commencement lump sum of £100,000 with the intention of using it to pay a contribution of the same amount into a registered pension scheme. However, rather than taking the lump sum and then using it to make the contribution, the employee instead arranges a salary sacrifice in respect of a bonus of £100,000 that would otherwise have been paid to the employee. As part of that salary sacrifice arrangement, the employer pays a contribution of £100,000 into a registered pension scheme in respect of the employee. That contribution of £100,000 is a significant increase.

The recycling rule is triggered because:

  • the employee intended to use the pension commencement lump sum as a means to pay a contribution to a registered pension scheme
  • that objective has been achieved through the salary sacrifice arrangement - taking the lump sum instead of the bonus foregone has allowed the individual to place the same £100,000 into a pension scheme that would have been paid had the employee taken the lump sum and then used it to pay a contribution of the same amount into the scheme
  • there has been a significant increase in contributions and that increase represents more than 30% of the amount of the lump sum.