Query about tax free lump sum when multiple pots are held

Query about tax free lump sum when multiple pots are held

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MattS5

Original Poster:

1,986 posts

198 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
So, I know this is a question for my financial advisor, but I'm not likely to see him, for another 3 months, and in reality it's a scenario that won't play out for another 15 months anyway.
But I was just pondering how it might work, and I know a few on here will have the knowledge.

For the benefit of the question, let's say there are 3 pension pots (these are hypothetical numbers to demonstrate the situation):

1. An employee workplace pension DC scheme with £300k
2. Another pot with £300k
3. Another pot with £100k

In early 2026 at age 55, I might wish to draw £125k as a tax free lump sum (assuming budget update tomorrow still allowing up to 25%) how would that work?

Is it simply a case of all 3 pots needing to be amalgamated and 18% crystalised (?) to get the drawdown required?

Thanks (and yes, I'm aware I have made a typo in the title but I can't seem to change it)

Edited by MattS5 on Tuesday 29th October 16:57

TownIdiot

1,563 posts

6 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
Ignore my now edited post.
Misread as Defined Benefit.

You you can 25% or a portion thereof of each of them, or combine them into one pot in a SIPP as manage as one pot

MattS5

Original Poster:

1,986 posts

198 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
Deleted due to the edited post above

MattS5

Original Poster:

1,986 posts

198 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
TownIdiot said:
Ignore my now edited post.
Misread as Defined Benefit.

You you can 25% or a portion thereof of each of them, or combine them into one pot in a SIPP as manage as one pot
Ah, cool. (I'll delete my previous reply). Thanks for clarifying.

TownIdiot

1,563 posts

6 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
To make my answer clearer you don't have to take the same % from each.

MattS5

Original Poster:

1,986 posts

198 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
TownIdiot said:
To make my answer clearer you don't have to take the same % from each.
Thats interesting, so would that be 25% maximum from any1 pot, or possibly 100% from 1 pot and 5% from another ?

TownIdiot

1,563 posts

6 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
Max 25% from each pot

OutInTheShed

9,287 posts

33 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
However much money you take from a SIPP fund as tax-free, 3x as much moves into a 'drawdown fund'
Unless you buy an annuity or something.

So if you take a 1/4 of a pot, the remaining 3/4 becomes a drawdown fund, which you can leave invested.
Anything you take from that drawdown fund, counts as taxable income.

MattS5

Original Poster:

1,986 posts

198 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
OutInTheShed said:
However much money you take from a SIPP fund as tax-free, 3x as much moves into a 'drawdown fund'
Unless you buy an annuity or something.

So if you take a 1/4 of a pot, the remaining 3/4 becomes a drawdown fund, which you can leave invested.
Anything you take from that drawdown fund, counts as taxable income.
Now this makes perfect sense, and I knew there must be a very easy way to explain how the part drawdown might work.

Thank you.

And to the previous poster, thank you as well, it's answered 1 question and then this answer above has ticked off another.

timbo999

1,350 posts

262 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
Worth noting that if the uncrystalised funds (i.e. the bit that haven't gone into drawdown/you've taken tax free portion from) grow, then so does the amount of tax free cash you can take from them.

Boringvolvodriver

10,068 posts

50 months

Tuesday 29th October
quotequote all
timbo999 said:
Worth noting that if the uncrystalised funds (i.e. the bit that haven't gone into drawdown/you've taken tax free portion from) grow, then so does the amount of tax free cash you can take from them.
Indeed - I took my tax free sums in 3 tranches over 5 years as I needed the funds and due to the growth seen, I ended up with more tax free than I would have done if I had drawn the lot when I retired.

Truckosaurus

12,036 posts

291 months

Wednesday 30th October
quotequote all
timbo999 said:
Worth noting that if the uncrystalised funds (i.e. the bit that haven't gone into drawdown/you've taken tax free portion from) grow, then so does the amount of tax free cash you can take from them.
Indeed. I think this is the bit that a lot of people (including myself) don't realise (or think about) when they first look into the 'lump sum'.

I suspect the term 'lump sum' is an out-dated term now, as it implies you have to take it all out at once (like people did in the past when they were buying annuities rather than doing a drawdown) and we should be referring to it as something like 'tax free element'.


Consigliere

351 posts

48 months

Thursday 31st October
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timbo999 said:
Worth noting that if the uncrystalised funds (i.e. the bit that haven't gone into drawdown/you've taken tax free portion from) grow, then so does the amount of tax free cash you can take from them.
i'm assuming this is still subject to the TFLS limits (approx 3260k ish?)

Double Fault

1,376 posts

270 months

Thursday 31st October
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Consigliere said:
i'm assuming this is still subject to the TFLS limits (approx 3260k ish?)
Yes......c. £268k.

alscar

5,368 posts

220 months

Thursday 31st October
quotequote all
Double Fault said:
Consigliere said:
i'm assuming this is still subject to the TFLS limits (approx 3260k ish?)
Yes......c. £268k.
Unless previous fixed protection gained in which case could be as high as circa £460k.

OutInTheShed

9,287 posts

33 months

Thursday 31st October
quotequote all
timbo999 said:
Worth noting that if the uncrystalised funds (i.e. the bit that haven't gone into drawdown/you've taken tax free portion from) grow, then so does the amount of tax free cash you can take from them.
That is true, but that 75% of that growth becomes taxable as income when you draw it.

Whereas if you draw out the max tax free lump sum, you can have some growth untaxed via your capaital gains allowance.
Unfortunately, CGT allowance seems to have shrunk somewhat.

thepeoplespal

1,674 posts

284 months

Sunday 3rd November
quotequote all
Are they not changing the age you can take a pension from 55 to 57 years?

I know it's a bit more complicated than that, but that could cause you a lot of hassle if you aren't aware of it.

MattS5

Original Poster:

1,986 posts

198 months

Sunday 3rd November
quotequote all
thepeoplespal said:
Are they not changing the age you can take a pension from 55 to 57 years?

I know it's a bit more complicated than that, but that could cause you a lot of hassle if you aren't aware of it.
That's from April 2028 it moves to 57.

I'm 55 in early 2026

mikeiow

6,195 posts

137 months

Monday 4th November
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MattS5 said:
So, I know this is a question for my financial advisor, but I'm not likely to see him, for another 3 months, and in reality it's a scenario that won't play out for another 15 months anyway.
Just on this point.
If you have a financial advisor, you are almost certainly paying him all year round.
Typically he is taking a % of your pot - maybe ½ to 1% p every year.
If you have this kind of question, drop him a line: make him earn that money wink