Posts Tagged ‘Australia QROPS’

UK Pension Transfer to Australia – Change in FIF Legislation

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Further to our previous news item regarding the abolition of the Foreign Investment Fund (FIF) taxation rules in Australia, Global QROPS Ltd have been asked to comment on the effect of the removal of FIF on the advice regarding a UK pension transfer to Australia, by the Financial Times Adviser (please see link below):

http://www.ftadviser.com/FinancialAdviser/Pensions/Personal/News/article/20100812/8d9d855c-a3a5-11df-ae7f-00144f2af8e8/Close-Intl-advice-is-critical-for-Brits-retiring-abroad.jsp

In the majority of cases, for UK pension members seeking to retire in Australia, it would be far more tax advantageous to have their benefits paid from an Australian Superannuation scheme (that has been approved as a QROPS), then have their benefits paid directly from a UK scheme – where any income would be taxed at the individual’s highest marginal rate of tax in Australia (if the individual is a permanent resident of Australia).

The removal of the FIF legislation has not changed the basic premise that a tax free retirement, for a permanent resident of Australia, would be best achieved with a pension transfer to Australia. However, now allowing pension funds outside of Australia to grow free from FIF tax, means that getting the best advice on the correct timing of a potential pension transfer to Australia has never been more important.

Simply holding UK pension funds, because they can grow free from FIF, and transferring them closer to retirement in Australia, may not be the answer. The type of UK pension (ie final salary scheme) the exchange rate, the annual Australian cap on overseas pension transfers in and the tax that applies on transfers into Australia after 6 months of the member’s arrival, are just some of the other main considerations that would form part of the advice as to the timing of a UK pension transfer to Australia.

Global QROPS Ltd attending the FREE London Seminar on Australian Immigration

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

In conjunction with professional immigration consultants Thames Migration, Global QROPS Ltd are pleased to invite you to a FREE seminar on Australia’s new skilled visa regulations and State Migration plans. All of the regulation changes, that happened during the year, and enacted as part of the Australian Government’s overhaul of its General Skilled Migration Program, are explained in this detailed seminar.

The Governments of Queensland and Western Australia, will be discussing, first-hand, the new State Migration Plans. New and relevant information will also be presented on the state sponsorships that these governments have to offer.

There will be a range of service providers in job placement, banking/currency transfer and removals exhibiting and available to speak on vital aspects of both a successful migration and settling in Australia. As stated, Global QROPS Ltd will be there to provide information on pension transfers to Australia as well as other important financial advice relevant to someone migrating to Australia.

This comprehensive seminar will be held in London, on Saturday 4th September from 11am to 2pm at: Westpac Banking Corporation
63 Saint Mary Axe
City of London, London EC3A8LE
020 7621 7000

In Attendance:
Global QROPS Ltd – experts in financial advice and pension transfers to Australia
Government of Queensland
Government of Western Australia
Thames Migration – Registered Migration Agents Hannibal Khoury and Greg Veal – the Thames team
Westpac – Expatriate Banking
PSS – Removals and World Movers
Hays – Job Placement Specialists

The seminar will begin with a presentation, at 11am, from the attending State Governments and Registered Migration Agent Hannibal Khoury. At the end, ample opportunity exists to individually speak with ourselves, a Registered Migration Agents, the states and a range of other settlement service providers about your visa situation and migration plans.

To secure your place at this FREE event please complete the online registration form at – http://www.thamesmigration.com/contactus/

The Thames Migration Team will be in touch shortly to confirm that your attendance has been booked.

Please feel free to contact Global QROPS Ltd for more information regarding this Seminar, Australian financial advice or pension transfers to Australia.

A UK Final Salary Pension Transfer to Australia – What are the factors?

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

A member of a UK final salary scheme, who is looking at a pension transfer to Australia, would need to understand the benefits that their existing scheme provides before transferring to Australia. In many cases, if an individual UK pension member is confident of remaining in Australia throughout their retirement, a UK pension transfer to Australia would make sense because of the tax free and flexible benefits that an Australia superannuation scheme can provide – even if the existing benefits are in a UK final salary (defined benefit) scheme.

However, as with many other issues with migration to Australia, just because a friend or work colleague in Australia has transferred their final salary scheme to Australia does not mean that you should follow suit. Not all benefits from final salary schemes are calculated the same way for each employer – indeed, even within the scheme the factors determining your retirement benefits can change depending on when membership of the scheme commenced.

The first main factor determining your benefits is the question of what defines a final salary? Final salary or final remuneration can be defined in several different ways. This can be an individual’s last year’s earnings in the year of their retirement or date of leaving employment or the best salary in the last 5 years of employment but more commonly it is an  average of the final 3 years salary when leaving employment.

The next factor is years of service. Again, each scheme can vary in this definition. This can be based on years of service in the scheme. It could also be based on the years of service with the employer (if the member joined the pension scheme at a later date of joining employment). A member would also need to be aware how their scheme defines a ‘year’ of service – are part years counted? Are whole years only counted?

The final main factor is the accrual rate. This is the ‘fraction’ applied to each year of service, for example 1/60ths or 1/80ths, to determine the final pension. Each final salary scheme can apply a different fraction.

Putting this altogether, if an individual retires with a final salary of £90,000 and has worked for 40 years, a scheme with an accrual rate of 1/60th would provide a pension of £60,000 pa (£90,000 x 40/60ths).

The above example is a basic calculation to illustrate – and would not be the calculation used for all final salary schemes – and assessing whether a pension transfer to Australia should occur in these circumstances would largely depend on what the scheme offers as a transfer value.

Global QROPS Ltd advisers have both the experience, and importantly, the permissions from the UK financial services authority (FSA) to provide advice on pension transfers from UK final salary schemes.

UK Pension Transfer to Australia – Residential Property Investment

Monday, February 1st, 2010

The main benefits that a UK expat pension member – who is now a permanent resident of Australia – may have when considering a UK pension transfer to Australia, is the tax free income and lump sum that that the may receive at retirement age 60 from an Australian QROPS (Qualifying Recognized Overseas Pensions Scheme).

UK expat pension member in Australia, who is several years from retirement, may consider a UK pension transfer to Australia for investment reasons rather than for the benefits that they could obtain in the future.

As far as UK pension plans are concerned certain assets held in schemes are considered ‘taxable property’. These assets include residential property, fine art, classic cars, antiques, jewellery etc. Would a pension transfer to Australia (or any other QROPS scheme) therefore, allow you to invest in something that would otherwise be deemed as taxable property in the UK?

The answer to this is no. The rules on these types of investments have been clear from day one of the QROPS legislation (6th April 2006). Investments such as residential property, within QROPS, are taxable throughout the period that the individual’s membership of the QROPS. This is an important distinction to payments to members, which are more flexible outside of the QROPS reporting period.

The major advantage of an Australia QROPS is that a member can access 100% of the fund, at retirement, after the Reporting Period. Therefore, if an individual wishes to purchase a residential property after they have received their funds from the scheme at retirement, they could have the option to do so.

UK Lifetime Allowance’s Effect on a Pension Transfer to Australia

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

For some people that are looking at a pension transfer to Australia – to an Australian scheme approved by the UK’s Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) as a QROPS – the UK Lifetime Allowance could have a bearing on the advice that they receive.
The UK Lifetime Allowance was introduced on 6th April 2006 (at the same time as QROPS) and basically was a limit set on a UK pension fund, that could receive tax benefits, when the pension either came into payment (through tax free cash, annuity or drawdown) or was transferred overseas. These payment or transfer events were known as Benefit Crystallization Events (BCEs).
The main concern for an individual, who is thinking about a pension transfer to Australia, is the Australian contribution cap limiting funds being transferred into Australia from the ATO (Australian Tax Office) legislation. However, for those individuals that have accumulated the larger pension funds, the UK Lifetime allowance could also pose a tax problem.
The UK Lifetime Allowance was set at £1,500,000 for pension funds in tax year 2006/07 and was to increase each year as follows: £1,600,000 in tax year 2007/08; £1,650,000 in tax year 2008/09; £1,750,000 in tax year 2009/10 and £1,800,000 in tax year 2010/11 and for the 5 immediate tax years thereafter.
For those with funds already in access of the Lifetime Allowance as at 6th April 2006, HMRC allowed those funds to be protected (providing the member applied for the protection) however, for those people that are not eligible for protection, above the lifetime allowance and looking to transfer to Australia and other overseas jurisdictions, UK tax penalties apply to excess of the transferred funds above the Lifetime Allowance for that UK tax year.
For example, if an individual that migrated to Australia, with funds in excess of the UK Lifetime Allowance, completed a pension transfer to Australia of A$450,000 with part of the fund and the rest to other overseas QROPS, any amount over above the allowance would be taxed at 55% (as a lump sum).

QROPS advice – a UK Pension Transfer to Australia and the Tax Rates

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

When migrating from the UK to Australia many individuals, that have accrued UK pension funds, take advice on a UK pension transfer to Australia – to transfer into an Australian QROPS (Qualifying Recognized Overseas Pension Scheme).

The benefits of a transfer to an Australian QROPS, from a UK scheme, is that at age 60 all payments from the Australian QROPS scheme in respect of the transfer, made to the member, are paid fax free.

If you migrate to Australia and do not transfer your pension to an Australian QROPS, then your private or company pension benefits would be paid to you directly from the UK scheme at retirement. Any permanent resident of Australia would be taxed at their highest marginal rate on this income (whether the income is received by them in Australia or not).

These rates, for tax year 2009/2010, are banded as follows:

A$1 to A$6,000               NIL
A$6,001 to A$35,000      15%
A$35,001 to A$80,000    30%
A$80,001 to A$180,000  38%
A$180,000 and over        45%

(The above rates do not include the Medicare Levy of 1.5%)

The tax year in Australia runs from 1 July to 30th June and the above rates would be subject to change on 30th June 2010.

Permanent residents of Australia with UK pension benefits, that are coming up to retirement, should consider a UK pension transfer to Australia – if they have not done so already – as a way of reducing the tax that they have to pay on their income in retirement.

For more information on Australian QROPS, speak to an adviser at Global QROPS Ltd.

A Defined Benefit (Final Salary) pension transfer to Australia – What if I’m contracted-out?

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

Many members of UK defined benefit (final salary) schemes are contracted out. How does this change a migrating member’s thinking when looking at a pension transfer to Australia?
Not everyone who is in a contracted out defined benefit scheme knows exactly what this means or the nature of the benefit. For those considering a UK pension transfer to Australia they would need pre-migration advice to be aware of the benefit they are potentially giving up from their existing UK scheme.
The final salary scheme benefit referred to as ‘contracting- out’ is the element of the pension that the employer has funded by redirecting the employees national insurance contributions, that were to provide them with the State Earnings Related Pension Scheme (SERPS), to the employer’s scheme.
In a defined benefit scheme, the pre 6th April 1997 benefits are known as GMP (Guaranteed Minimum Pension) and the post 6th April 1997 benefits are known as Section 9(2B) Rights.
Although the precise calculation of these pension rights is complicated, they could form a significant part of a member’s final salary income. The guaranteed nature of a defined benefit pension is lost when transferring to an Australian QROPS and, with it, the contracted out element.
An individual with a UK defined benefit scheme, on a permanent visa to Australia, may consider the tax free benefit gained from a transfer to an Australian QROPS appealing but they would need to weigh this against the benefit of guaranteed income for life from their UK Contracted Out Defined Benefit scheme.

An Unsecured (Drawdown) Pension Transfer to Australia

Monday, October 19th, 2009

From A-Day (6th April 2006) the UK Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has permitted unsecured pension funds to be transferred to another pension scheme after income drawdown has commenced.  For migrants looking at a pension transfer to Australia, where income drawdown has commenced on their UK schemes, the option to transfer is still available.
The main restriction, for those looking at an unsecured pension transfer to Australia, is that the receiving scheme has to be an Australian QROPS (Qualifying Recognized Overseas Pension Scheme). There are, however, many superannuation schemes that are approved as QROPS by HMRC so, with the appropriate advice, this should not be a problem.
A second restriction would be on the benefits that can be taken during the QROPS reporting period. Should an unsecured pension transfer to Australia be completed, any benefits paid from the Australian QROPS would have to be in line with the UK GAD (Government Actuary Department Rates). Any payments to the member, in access of UK maximums during this period, would be subject to an unauthorized payment charge.
After the QROPS reporting period, which is 5 complete UK years tax years of a member’s overseas residency, payments made from the scheme can revert to the local Australian rules. UK pension members should, therefore, be aware of all benefits and restrictions before they affect a pension transfer to Australia – especially if they are already drawing an income or tax free cash from their UK pension fund.

Will my UK Final Salary Pension Transfer to Australia?

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Many clients of Global QROPS Ltd have UK Final Salary Pensions schemes and ask our advisers, will a Final Salary (Defined Benefits) scheme transfer to Australia? Providing the receiving scheme in Australia is registered and approved as a Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pension Scheme (QROPS), a transfer can take place, however, the more appropriate question should be ‘would I benefit from a UK final salary pension transfer to Australia?’.

Australian Superannuation schemes work on a very different basis to UK Final Salary schemes. Australian Superannuation schemes are set up on Money Purchase (Defined Contribution) basis and thus there is no like for like equivalent of a UK final salary scheme.

Whether you are considering a UK final salary pension transfer to Australia, or to any other UK pension or QROPS scheme, an individual has to be aware of the benefits they are giving up from their original scheme. With a UK final salary scheme, the responsibility and the cost to provide a pension member with retirement benefits lies with the employer (or former employer). By transferring out of such a scheme into a money purchase environment, an individual is placing the responsibility on themselves and the new scheme to provide adequate benefits for their retirement.

It is vitally important, therefore, that an individual establishes that they have received a fair transfer value from the trustees of their final salary scheme before they even consider a transfer out. Global QROPS Ltd can provide impartial advice and transfer analysis calculations for anyone considering a UK final salary pension transfer to Australia.

Pension Transfer to Australia and other Advice Issues

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

UK based advisers, Global QROPS Ltd, specialise in advising people migrating to Australia the best course of action for their finances – including advising on a UK pension transfer to Australia.

Many people decide, when migrating, that they want to make a clean break from the UK. This would include, not just transferring their UK pension to Australia, but cashing in, selling or dissolving many of their other assets.

In many cases Global QROPS Ltd agree that this could be the right thing to do, however, advice would need to be taken before any decisions are made in order to avoid any potential financial loss.

For example, someone may come to Global QROPS Ltd who is considering cashing in their endowment. There may be tax issues in holding the endowment in the UK once they arrive in Australia – because of the Foreign Investment Fund (FIF) tax rules – and therefore may think that they should cash it in. What an individual may want to look at, before doing this, are factors such as early surrender penalties in the endowment, the life cover that is provided and any terminal bonus that might be lost on cashing in early. Would the potential tax payable be higher than providing replacement life cover in Australia, for instance?

On top of this, a client may not be aware that their visa could exempt them from FIF tax or that their combined assets fall below the exemption. Global QROPS Ltd emphasises that advice is not just about a pension transfer to Australia but other considerations as well.