State pensioners warned they may have to part with some cash
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State pensioners have been warned they are "perilously close" to having to pay extra tax. It comes as the pension uplift is now just months away, and while the increase is seen as a good thing, it pushes the State Pension almost up to it becoming subject to income tax.
The personal allowance is currently £12,570 a year, while the full new State Pension currently pays £221.20 a week, or £11,502.40 a year, only just over £2,000 away from the limit. When the State Pension rises by 4.1% in April, the full new State Pension will jump up to £230.30 a week, or £11,975.60 per year.
Looking towards the increase in April, AJ Bell's head of public policy, Rachel Vahey, warned: "The State Pension will be at a level perilously close to the frozen personal allowance and should overtake it in a couple of years if things continue, thanks to frozen tax thresholds.
"At that point something must surely give. But slowing the increase in state pension growth or unfreezing the personal allowance both seem unlikely. "It could be that this fast-approaching crunch time means the Government will finally be forced to address the question of how much the State Pension should really offer, at what age, and how it can increase payments sustainably each year.".
One option the Government could look at in its efforts to keep the State Pension affordable is to increase the State Pension age, which is currently 66 for both men and women. This is increasing to 67 between 2026 and 2028 and then to 68 from 2044 to 2046. There were previous reports this second change could be brought forward, with the Government due to issue an update on this question in the first two years of this Parliament.