Pensions are a tricky subject and many of us who
have them do not really understand them in any great detail. The
following information is taken from the Insolvency Service and is their
current best advice on the subject. I have attempted to simplify
matters somewhat and have stripped out esoteric detail.
There are basically 4 types of pension that you
may have already or could be entitled to receive in the future:
• State pension – this will include any payment
from the State Second Pension
(S2P) (formerly known as the State Earnings
Related Pension Scheme or SERPS).
• Occupational pension – this is a scheme set up
by an employer to provide members
with retirement and death benefits. Contributions
may have been made by your employer, you as an employee, or both.
• Personal pension plan – this is a personal
pension policy you have taken out with an
insurance company to pay you benefits in later
life. (Retirement annuity contracts
are similar to personal pension plans. If you have
a retirement annuity contract, it
will be treated in your bankruptcy in a similar
way to a personal pension plan.)
• Group personal pension – this is a personal
pension policy taken out with a
pension provider, often on favourable rates and
terms negotiated by your employer or
trade association. After a bankruptcy order is
made, a group personal pension is dealt
with in the same way as other personal pension
plans.
You may have more than one type of pension and you
may have several pensions of the same type. For example, you may have
occupational pensions from your present and previous employers.
What information will the official
receiver and my trustee need?
You have a duty to co-operate with, and to provide
all the information required by, the official receiver and your trustee
(who will be either the official receiver or an insolvency
practitioner). They will need the following details about all the
pensions you are receiving, or will be entitled to receive in the
future:
• the name of any occupational pension scheme
which you, and/or your present or
former employer acting on your behalf, have
contributed to • evidence of how much benefit you get or will get under
your occupational pension scheme(s) and how much has been contributed
to them, particularly in the last 2 years
• the policy details for all personal pensions
plans you have started
• if you are receiving a pension, the amount of
your regular benefits; also the date you
received any lump sum and the amount of that
payment.
How will bankruptcy affect my
pension?
If a bankruptcy order is made on a bankruptcy
petition presented on or after 29 May 2000, all pension schemes that
have been approved by HM Revenue and Customs remain outside a
bankrupt's estate. This means they cannot be claimed by the trustee in
bankruptcy. This follows the introduction of the Welfare Reform and
Pensions Act 1999.
What are approved pension schemes?
Approved pension schemes are mainly:
• pension schemes registered under section 153 of
the Finance Act 2004 (mainly
schemes registered by HM Revenue and Customs, plus
annuity contracts that are
used to secure benefits under a registered pension
scheme but do not immediately
pay benefits)
• retirement annuity contracts
• personal pension schemes approved by
HM Revenue and Customs for tax purposes, and
• stakeholder pensions.
These are the most common approved pension
arrangements, but yours may be different. If the official receiver is
in any doubt as to whether your pension scheme has been approved by HM
Revenue and Customs, he or she will write to your pension provider for
confirmation.
Once the official receiver is satisfied that your
pension is an approved pension arrangement, he or she will write to you
and your pension provider confirming that the pension does not form
part of the bankruptcy estate.
What if my pension scheme is an
unapproved scheme?
If your pension scheme is unapproved, you may
still be able to exclude it from your
bankruptcy estate by applying to court for an
exclusion order or by making a qualifying agreement with your trustee.
This is something to discuss with your trustee.
If a pension policy does form part of your
bankruptcy estate, the official receiver or
insolvency practitioner trustee can claim the lump
sum and the regular payments even after your discharge from bankruptcy.
It may be possible for you to 'buy back' your interest in the pension
policy from the trustee in bankruptcy and you should speak to your
trustee about this.
What if I receive pension payments
while I’m bankrupt?
Even if the trustee cannot claim your pension or
any part of it, if you receive payments from a pension before your
discharge from bankruptcy, then the payments can be included in any
calculation for an income-payments order or income-payments agreement.
(This is where you agree, or the court orders you, to pay part of your
wages, salary or other income to the trustee.)
What about my state pension?
Your state pension or any payments from the State
Second Pension (S2P) (formerly known as SERPS) do not form part of the
bankruptcy estate.
Should I continue making pension
contributions after the bankruptcy order is
made?
Pension contributions can continue under your
existing pension arrangements or under new pension arrangements made
after the bankruptcy order. If your trustee claims all or part or your
pension benefits, then it may not be in your interest to continue to
make payments, particularly into a personal pension scheme, as you may
not receive the full benefit of them. If you have any concerns about
continuing to make payments, you should seek advice from your pension
provider or an
independent financial adviser.
What happens to my pension scheme
death benefits if I die before my discharge from bankruptcy?
An individual may die between the making of the
bankruptcy order and the date of their discharge from bankruptcy. If
the pension scheme does not nominate a beneficiary (or class of
beneficiary) to receive the death benefit, the trustee can claim the
death benefit.
What if I was made bankrupt on a
bankruptcy petition presented before 29
May 2000?
If you were made bankrupt on a bankruptcy petition
presented before 29 May 2000, your trustee in bankruptcy may claim part
or all of your pension, whether you are receiving it now or it is due
in the future.
If you have a personal pension plan:
From the date of the bankruptcy order all rights
and benefits (except rights arising where the policy was used to
contract out of SERPS) vest in (transfer to) the bankruptcy estate.
This means that your trustee in bankruptcy has the same rights under
the policy as you did before becoming bankrupt. So the trustee in
bankruptcy cannot claim the pension benefits until you reach the
earliest retirement age
allowed by the policy (for example, your 50th
birthday).
If you are a member of an occupational
pension scheme:
Some occupational pensions have 'forfeiture
clauses'. These mean that if you are made
bankrupt, you automatically lose your pension
rights. If the trustees of the pension scheme apply the forfeiture
clause, the trustee in bankruptcy cannot claim the benefits as an
asset. Your trustee in bankruptcy will inspect the rules of your
pension scheme to see whether it has a valid forfeiture clause. If
there is no valid forfeiture clause, then your trustee in bankruptcy
will claim your pension rights for the benefit of the bankruptcy
estate. If your trustee can claim your pension benefits under a
personal pension or an occupational pension, this will include any lump
sum as well
as the regular payments. If you are under 60, you
may be able to ‘buy back’ the benefits under the scheme from the
official receiver. In most cases you will need to
pay the official receiver 45% of the current fund
value. More information is available in the information sheet “The
pension buy-back option”.
If your trustee claims any part of your pension,
he or she will collect it when you reach the earliest retirement age
under your pension arrangements, even if this is after your discharge
from bankruptcy.
The trustee cannot claim:
• your state pension or any payments from
the State Second Pension (S2P)(formerly
known as SERPS)
• any protected rights – these rights arise in any
pension you may have where you or
your employer have contracted out of SERPS. They
represent the equivalent of
the SERPS benefits within your pension. In an
occupational pension scheme, the
protected rights may be known as 'a guaranteed
minimum pension' or 'benefits
under the reference scheme test'.
Article Source: http://
www.articlesbase.com/finance-articles/what-will-happen-to-my-
pension-in-bankruptcy-1747090.html About the Author
Contact Steve Thatcher of Help With Debt (UK)
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