10 finance decisions you should avoid before the autumn budget

In This Article:

Endless speculation about the budget has persuaded an awful lot of people they need to take action now, to protect themselves from whatever it holds in store. Capital gains tax threats, tax on pensions and inheritance tax concerns have all thrown people into a state of panic, and there’s a risk they’ll rush into things that come back to bite them.

There are some eminently sensible steps you can take now — like paying into a pension or moving assets into an ISA. However, there are also 10 steps that could seriously backfire — some of them leaving you far worse off than if you’d left things as they were.

1. Taking tax free cash out of your pension

Rumours are swirling about whether pensions are in chancellor Rachel Reeves' sights, with suggestions that she might look to trim back the amount of tax-free cash people can take from their pension. Ripping this out of your pension now to avoid a tax grab may seem like a good idea, but it’s something you may come to regret.

If you are going to take your tax-free cash, you need to have a plan for what you’re going to do with it. Simply taking it and putting it in a bank account paying a low interest rate means that money misses the potential for further investment growth in the pension. Investments within a pension also grow free of tax, and unless you’re taking £20,000 or less, and putting it in an ISA, you'll lose that protection against tax.

Read more: Keir Starmer warns autumn budget will be ‘painful’

It's also worth saying that under current rules, money in a pension is usually free of inheritance tax — this is not the case with money in ISAs or bank accounts so there’s also the chance that taking your tax-free cash now could land your family with a nasty tax bill in future.

2. Taking income you don’t need out of the pension

Deciding to take an income earlier than you intended because you're worried about how the tax treatment might change could also come back to bite you.

Flexibly accessing your pension will trigger the money purchase annual allowance, and this could slash the amount you can pay in from as much as £60,000 per year to just £10,000. It’s a move that could seriously hamper your attempts to rebuild your pension at a later date because too much has been taken too early.

3. Realising too many capital gains now

Investors with an eye on potential capital gains tax (CGT) changes may be weighing up the benefits of realising capital gains way beyond their annual allowance right now, before the rate has a chance to rise. They’ll pay tax, but they might reason that they might end up paying less, and at least they know where they stand.