In general, large employers in Ireland have occupational pension schemes, but many smaller employers throughout the country do not.
Each pension scheme has its own set of rules. Pension schemes nationally are generally regulated by the Pensions Board. Members of schemes have certain rights in respect of such matters as information. Contibutions to approved occupational pension schemes may attract tax relief. Regulation for tax purposes is supervised by the Retirement Benefits District of the Revenue Commissioners.
There is no legal obligation on employers to provide occupational pension schemes for employees. However, more and more employers are putting schemes in place and there is positive government encouragement to do so.
Occupational pensions are organised by employers to provide pensions to one or more employees on retirement or to surviving dependants on the death of an employee.
A personal pension scheme (properly known as a Retirement Annuity Contract- RAC) is an arrangement by a self-employed person or an employee, generally a person who is not a member of an occupational pension scheme, to provide a pension on retirement or to surviving dependants on death. RACs are governed by tax legislation and financial services legislation. They are not regulated by the Pensions Board.
You may be a member of an occupational pension scheme and also arrange a personal pension. However, it may not be possible to avail of the tax benefits in respect of both. You may not contribute to an occupational pension scheme and a personal pension arrangement at the same time in relation to the same employment. However, you may make a personal pension arrangement in respect of earnings from another employment or from self-employment.
A person becoming an employee and joining an occupational pension scheme can now continue to contribute to the RAC schemes where they join an occupational pension scheme. However, tax relief will not be given to continued contributions.
From 2003 onwards, Personal Retirement Savings Accounts (PRSAs) became available. These are designed to be used instead of occupational pension schemes by employers who do not wish to sponsor such schemes. They may also be used to supplement occupational scheme benefits, as Additional Voluntary Contributions (AVCs) and as a substitute for personal pension schemes. From 15 September 2003, employers must offer access to at least one standard PRSA to any employee who is not eligible to join an occupational pension scheme within 6 months of joining employment and must offer a PRSA for AVC purposes if there is no facility for AVCs within the scheme. Further information on PRSAs (pdf) is available from the Pension Board's website.
Occupational pension schemes may be contributory or non-contributory, funded or unfunded, defined benefit or defined contribution.
In contributory schemes, both you and your employer pay contributions towards the scheme.
In non-contributory schemes, you do not contribute but your employer does.
Virtually all occupational schemes are funded - the contributions are put into a designated fund and the benefits are paid from that fund. The most notable exception is the public service pension arrangement where there is no fund and benefits are paid out of current government funds.
A National Pensions Reserve Fund (NPRF) has been established to provide a fund that can be drawn upon for future payments of public service and social welfare pensions. This is different from funded pension schemes. In a funded scheme, you are a member of the scheme and you have a direct interest in the fund. You have no direct claim on the NPRF.
A defined benefit scheme is one where the benefit entitlement is defined in some way by reference to your earnings, your length of service, an index or a fixed amount. So, you know in advance that your pension will be, for example, half of your final salary if you have 40 years service or that it will be a certain amount each week. In defined benefit schemes, the contributions may have to be varied from time to time in order to make sure that the fund can meet the level of benefits. Some schemes have provisions for the employer to top up the fund if necessary.
A defined contribution scheme is one where the contribution is fixed by agreement but the benefits are decided by reference to the value of the contributions paid under the scheme and are not fixed in advance. So, you do not know what level of pension you will get.
If you are a member of a defined contribution occupational pension scheme and you retire in the period from 4 December 2008 to 31 December 2010, you have the option of taking your lump sum and purchasing a retirement annuity immediately on retirement or of taking the lump sum and deferring the purchase of the annuity, subject to agreement with your scheme trustee, until 31 December 2010.
It was announced in Budget 2011 that flexible options on retirement, for example, access to approved retirement funds (ARFs), would be extended to all members of defined contribution schemes.
Occupational and personal pensions operate independently of the social welfare pension system (Social welfare pensions include contributory and non-contributory pensions) and there is no statutory link between the two. However, it is common for occupational pensions to take into account the level of social welfare pension received in calculating the level of benefit. For example, some schemes provide for a benefit, which, together with the social welfare pension, will give you a half or two-thirds of your final salary. This may be done when you start to receive your pension but your occupational pension may not be subsequently reduced because your social welfare pension is increased.
Such schemes are sometimes called integrated or co-ordinated schemes.
If you are a member of an approved pension scheme, you can get tax relief at your highest rate on your contributions to the scheme. There are various rules that pension schemes must meet in order to get the tax relief and there is a limit to the amount of the relief. Since 1 January 2011 you pay PRSI and the Universal Social Charge on your pension contributions.
The maximum pension contributions, in any one year, for which you are entitled to tax relief, is related to your age and is expressed as a percentage of your gross income. In 2011 the maximum gross income figure for relief purposes is €115,000 (was €150,000). The percentage relief limits are:
| Age | Limited to |
| under 30 years | 15% of *net relevant earnings |
| 30-39 years | 20% of *net relevant earnings |
| 40-49 years | 25% of *net relevant earnings |
| 50-54 years | 30% of *net relevant earnings |
| 55-59 years | 35% of *net relevant earnings |
| 60 years plus | 40% of *net relevant earnings |
*For employers, earnings means gross pay for tax purposes. For the self-employed, earnings means net relevant earnings, that is, earnings less allowable expenses.
You pay tax on the pension when you receive it.
Taxation of retirement lump sum
Since 1 January 2011 there is a limit of €200,000 on the amount of the tax-free retirement lump sum. Lump sum payments above that limit will be taxed as follows:
| Amount of lump sum | Income tax rate |
| Up to €200,000 | 0% |
| €200,001 - €575,000 | 20% |
| Over €575,000 | Taxpayer's marginal rate |
The income tax charge on the refund to a taxpayer of contributions to an occupational pension scheme was reduced from the 25% rate to the standard rate of income tax - currently 20%. This change applied to refunds made on or after 5 December 2001.
There is a levy of 0.6% on the market value of assets which are managed in pension funds and pension plans approved under Irish tax legislation. (These include occupational pension schemes, Retirement Annuity Contracts and Personal Retirement Savings Accounts). You can find out more about the pension levy on the Department of Finance's website.
The Pensions Board is the regulatory body for occupational pensions.
The Board consists of representatives nominated by trade unions, employers, the Government, the pensions industry and professional groups involved with occupational pension schemes.
The main functions of the Board are:
Occupational pension schemes are obliged to register with the Board.
The Ombudsman for Pensions has the power to investigate and determine your complaints concerning disputes of fact or law and errors in relation to occupational pension schemes and PRSAs. The Ombudsman has the power to give any directions necessary to resolve the complaint or dispute and can give financial compensation (redress) but this cannot exceed the actual loss of benefit under the occupational pension scheme or PRSA. The Ombudsman does not have the power to award legal costs. All decisions made by the Ombudsman are binding between the parties subject to a right of appeal by either party to the High Court
The Pensions Board has produced a number of leaflets on the operation of the Pensions Act. It provides information to members of pension schemes about their rights under the legislation. If you have a complaint, the Board will advise you about your rights.
If necessary, the Board has extensive powers to inspect the scheme's books and records, to enter premises and to require people to give explanations. It may apply to the High Court to have pension scheme trustees replaced in order to protect the interests of the members.
Among the more important rights you have as a member of a pension scheme are:
The right to information
The trustees of the scheme must provide information to members, prospective members, their spouses, people entitled or prospectively entitled to benefits under the scheme and to representatives of trade unions.
You are entitled to get information about the scheme, about how it is administered, what rights you have and what obligations you have. The trustees are obliged to tell you if more than 5% of the scheme's assets are invested in the employer's business or in any one investment.
The right to be involved in the scheme
In certain cases, you are entitled to be involved in the selection of trustees. This is the case if your scheme has 50 or more qualified members or 12 or more qualified members of a directly invested scheme. A qualified member is a member of the scheme currently in employment or a pensioner, but does not include a member who is covered only for death in service or a non-member (e.g. a dependant) who is receiving benefits from the scheme.
Members can elect half the total number of trustees (excluding the chairperson), subject to a minimum of two.
Pension schemes can, to a considerable extent, set their own rules about contributions and benefits. There are some rules set out in legislation to which they must adhere.
There are specific rules about what happens if you leave the pension scheme for whatever reason, for example, if you change jobs or you become self-employed or retire early without a pension. Your benefits from the pension scheme may be preserved within the scheme or transferred to another scheme. If you have at least 2 years service, you are entitled to a preserved benefit if you leave before the normal retirement age. A preserved benefit means that you get a pension when you reach the scheme's normal retirement age. (Prior to 2 June 2002, 5 years service was needed to qualify for preservation).
Alternatively, you can ask the trustees to transfer your pension rights to a new pension scheme.
You can find out more about the preservation and transfer of benefits (pdf).
The trustees are obliged to meet the minimum standards of funding for funded occupational schemes.
Pension schemes usually have benefits for you when you retire and for your widowed spouse and dependent children after your death. Not all schemes have arrangements for dependants.
Under an occupational pension scheme, the maximum benefit that can be provided for a spouse or dependent has been increased from 2/3 of the full pension to 100% of the provision.
Some schemes may allow you to designate the person who should benefit under the scheme so it is possible, in some cases, to nominate a person other than a spouse.
In judicial separation and divorce proceedings, the court may make various types of financial settlements. Among these is a Pension Adjustment Order.
The Pension Adjustment Order designates a part of the pension for payment to a spouse (usually the wife) and dependant children. The judge decides how much of the pension should be designated. The effect of such an order is that the designated part of the pension remains in the pension scheme but is payable to your spouse and children when you reach pension age or die.
Information about your own scheme is available from the trustees of the scheme. Information on pensions generally and your rights is available from the Pensions Board.
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28-30 Lower Mount Street
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Ireland
Tel:+353 (0)1 613 1900
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Homepage: http://www.pensionsboard.ie/
Email: info@pensionsboard.ie