Tax on widows’ annuities axed

Tax on widows’ annuities axed

Wed 03 Dec 2014

The Chancellor today announced that he will abolish tax on annuity payments that are made to spouses after their partner has died. This applies to married pensioners. Currently surviving partners of spouses with joint life or guaranteed annuities must pay tax on the income payments they receive from a joint life annuity. Typically, this is from a half to a third of the original income.

But today, Mr Osborne announced that those income payments will be tax-free in future, in line with recent changes to death taxes on drawdown plans.

Those changes mean that a pension can pass to an individual’s widowed spouse free of tax if they die before the age of 75, or at the beneficiary’s marginal tax rate if death occurs after age 75 – a significant reduction on the previous 55% rate. But the changes applied only to income drawdown pensions, not annuities.

Today’s announcement extends the abolition of the death tax on drawdown into line with joint life annuities and corrects an apparent inconsistency.

This is good news for widows and widowers who receive income from joint life annuities and means they will not now have to pay any tax on income received after a spouses death.

It is also welcome news for the annuity industry who have seen sales plummet in light of recent changes to drawdown plans. Annuities remain an important tool for any individual looking for a guaranteed level of pension income and the new rules level the playing field between drawdown and annuity.

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