Mrs Bodian received a £1.25 refund quite recently. And she didn't even know she was entitled to it.Fair enough. All I know is I have to complete a self-assessment and it’s nigh on impossible to get any money back without a lengthy battle!
Mrs Bodian received a £1.25 refund quite recently. And she didn't even know she was entitled to it.Fair enough. All I know is I have to complete a self-assessment and it’s nigh on impossible to get any money back without a lengthy battle!
Agree, but there is a paradox - the more pensioners who apply for/receive Pension Credits (and related or 'passported' benefits), the more it wipes out the savings Reeves intended to make from reducing WFA!Read the first page but not the others so apologies.
No, I wouldn't want to pay more tax just for WFP for 'all' pensioners. Like all benefits (apart from the basic pension itself) I believe they should be means tested.
With regard to the WFP, I agree in principle with what Labour have done except for where they have fixed the cut off point which I think is too low and excludes too many that actually do need the payment. That said, the 800,000 that are entitled to but don't claim pension credits need to apply. As Martin Lewis pointed out on tv the other day, getting pension credits opens the door to a host of other benefits and his view was along the lines that even if pension credit only gets you a couple of extra quid a week, it's worth it for the other benefits that come along.
Don't be so sure ...In addition there’s no database lumping your UK household income in with Mrs.HT.
May wipe out the savings, but should end up with the monies previously going to those who didn't need it all going to those that do.Agree, but there is a paradox - the more pensioners who apply for/receive Pension Credits (and related or 'passported' benefits), the more it wipes out the savings Reeves intended to make from reducing WFA!
It wasn’t anything complex or contentious. My self assessment was incorrect to the tune of £745. My accountant re-submitted my self-assessment and we waited. I called after a while, they claimed they hadn’t received it, my accountant had a code or something he stated as evidence of the re-submission, they said they’d look for it, I kept calling, I kept explaining to a different person every time and kept being told they’d investigate and I’d get a call-back etc etc. Eventually we were asked to re-submit again and after another few months I got the money back plus 50 extra for the inconvenience. Whole thing took 18 months.This was my experience also. 15+ years doing self assessment with almost every one resulting in a refund due, always got paid within 3 weeks of submitting SA
Maybe @Herr Tubthumper had more complex or contentious tax circumstances, but 18 months sounds unusual.
Not all pensioners will receive £460 as I understand it .....doesn't that only apply on the state pension as of 2016....Of course pensioners receive an equal or above inflation pay rise every single year with the "triple lock", but somehow there is always money for that, and nobody ever questions it. Yet when it's people doing critical jobs suppling crucial public services, for some reason there's no money and people get all indignant that they have the temerity to ask.
As I understand it, this year's rise is circa £460, so actually more than the winter fuel allowance that they have lost.
Although the WFP is not £300 for most. Only >80s (3 million) got £300, under 80s (8 million) got £200.Not all pensioners will receive £460 as I understand it .....doesn't that only apply on the state pension as of 2016....
...then your point as to the £460 ...so net £160....... so increase in energy bills....potentially rent ...council tax etc...hmmm
It’s crap they don’t cooperate. Whilst I agree with the principle of means testing, it’s also crap that in 2024 there isn’t a relatively simple way to administer it.The 'tax man' is HM Revenue and Customs. Pension credit and Universal credit is the domain of the DWP. Do they co-operate? I'll leave it to you to guess the answer!
(In my years with the DWP in the 80s and 90s, I can vouch for the fact the the Inland Revenue refused to co-operate even on a basic level)
early? that's the middle of the night you are writing thatThank you. It’s still early, and that’s my excuse. 🫢
According to HMRC in a report published in June this year, a 1% change in base rate would raise £6.2b in 25/26, add another 1% to upper band would raise £1.35b so actually raising the higher rate would be enough especially if you added the WFP to higher rate payers income & taxed it at 40%.Would it really cost as much as 2% for all of us, on all bands? I'm amazed that's how much the WFP cost.
The issue is that a lot of pensioners don't need it and can easily afford to go without it, whereas there are many more people who are scraping by, who can't afford 2% on the basic rate of tax.
it always astonishes me how badly integrated government computer systems are, wouldn't (shouldn't) take a lot to extract tax paid amount and then apply it to the system which pays the winter fuel.OP’s question does state ‘every band’ tbf but this is a large part of the WF allowance problem - the admin costs of means-testing if you start to put layers onto what has been blunt instrument.…….maybe there’s a simple (ish) way to pay it to, say, pensioners that don’t pay tax for example Vast majority of my mates/family that are of state pension age have no need for the allowance and shouldn’t get it.
Think @GB was perhaps suggesting the 2% to plug the 22bn black hole not just cover the WFAAccording to HMRC in a report published in June this year, a 1% change in base rate would raise £6.2b in 25/26, add another 1% to upper band would raise £1.35b so actually raising the higher rate would be enough especially if you added the WFP to higher rate payers income & taxed it at 40%.
Pretty sure it was child allowance where if you as single earner in family earnt £50.1 k your family didn't get it but if both of you worked and earnt £49.9k each you got it.Don't be so sure ...
It would not be too difficult to combine the Electorol Roll register, where household cohabitation data is held with the HMRC CESA and DCDM systems. OSA won't allow me to elaborate but HMRC definitely have the data to be able to generate a household income figure using PAYE and SA data and DCDM would get pretty close to getting an individual's asset wealth worth.
I'm personally not aware that such a system already exists (above my security clearance) but to say "no database" exists may not be entirely correct.
I was often taken aback by the level of data capture / data matching that HMRC do to be aware of our individual financial circumstances.
Banks and FIs produce automated interest reports for HMRC too…….Don't be so sure ...
It would not be too difficult to combine the Electorol Roll register, where household cohabitation data is held with the HMRC CESA and DCDM systems. OSA won't allow me to elaborate but HMRC definitely have the data to be able to generate a household income figure using PAYE and SA data and DCDM would get pretty close to getting an individual's asset wealth worth.
I'm personally not aware that such a system already exists (above my security clearance) but to say "no database" exists may not be entirely correct.
I was often taken aback by the level of data capture / data matching that HMRC do to be aware of our individual financial circumstances.
….and authomatically change your tax code to collect any tax due on the interest it seems. Presume they allocate 50% on joint accounts??Banks and FIs produce automated interest reports for HMRC too…….