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STATE. PENSION
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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ZZzzz | Report | 2 Apr 2024 15:31 |
Put simply the government is Robin Hood in reverse. |
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Tawny | Report | 2 Apr 2024 15:07 |
I’ve just had a thought. In the next couple of weeks or so I should get a new P60 as the tax year 23/24 ends in less than a week. Maybe the pension site will update then to ask for the latest one. |
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Tawny | Report | 2 Apr 2024 14:59 |
I’ve tried to use the pension calculator but I can’t unfortunately. It asked for my total earnings from my P60 for the year 22/23 so I put in nothing but apparently I must have earned more than nothing. |
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Tawny | Report | 15 Feb 2024 14:40 |
I was covered for part of my unemployment but not all of it as I could claim job seekers but not universal credit. I will need to look into missing years and so will Mr Owl. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that the new pension age rise will only affect those born from 1986 onwards. Those of us who were born no later than 1985 have had our pension age change three times during our working lives so they promised no further rises. |
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nameslessone | Report | 15 Feb 2024 08:50 |
Sorry Tawny, but I think there has already been a suggestion that it will rise to 70/71 in your time. Frightening. |
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Tawny | Report | 15 Feb 2024 05:51 |
Retirement terrifies me or rather how we will manage financially terrifies me. Mr Owl was born in 1982 & I was born in 1984 and the government have said they will not raise our pension age again as it has already been raised more than once. However we’ll see if they stick to that promise.we are both missing years due to health and unemployment so here’s hoping we can make it up. |
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nameslessone | Report | 14 Feb 2024 09:48 |
Shirley - I hope that your daughter has found the information she needs. |
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Florence61 | Report | 9 Feb 2024 20:37 |
Annx I didn't get a letter, I looked at the gov.uk and did my pension forecast. So I'm right in thinking then, I already have more than enough years to get my full state pension in 2028. I'm 63 this year. |
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Linda | Report | 9 Feb 2024 19:09 |
I could not work when my children where young for personal reasons so never paid a stamp when I divorced my first husband I got a job at lunch time in a school but then part timers could not pay into pension, two years before I left the government brought that we could have I joined I get a very small pension from the council, I was lucky I remarried and I have his works pensions but he died when I was in my 40s so got a widows pensions but when it came to my state pension they took from what my husband had paid in but only from 1978 |
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maggiewinchester | Report | 9 Feb 2024 18:55 |
I had a letter telling me I needed 4 more years NI. |
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Annx | Report | 9 Feb 2024 18:34 |
Florence I think the letter is a stock letter with everything from your NI account filled in to show the full position. I can't remember your age, but assume you only needed 35 years to get your full pension if 2028 is your pension age. Your NI account shows not enough NI paid in one year and that you have 5 more years when you could pay if you needed to. Does it say on the letter anywhere that you have a full record for your pension? They daren't put that you don't need any more NI payments or people would be telling their employers not to stop any!! If there's a number on the letter you could always ring to make sure and for peace of mind. We still all have to carry on paying till pension age if we are working and earning enough as the NI fund pays out to those who haven't paid in in certain circs and there could be multiple benefits paid from a single NI record in some cases. Employers also have to continue paying. |
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Annx | Report | 9 Feb 2024 18:10 |
I agree with Maggie about them paying percentages as increases meaning that those on the old, smaller pension get less. It keeps widening the gap between those getting the new pension and those getting the old pension. Yet bills cost the same for us all. |
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Andysmum | Report | 9 Feb 2024 15:36 |
Names, I heard that one too. I think things are a bit different now as people used to play the system and say thy were sick when they weren't. I remember one person who had two jobs and used to turn up for one day every couple of weeks (thus avoiding the need for doctor's notes). Eventually someone kept tabs on when she turned up for work and after a lot of red tape she was actually sacked. This was almost unheard of!! |
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nameslessone | Report | 9 Feb 2024 15:04 |
I can't remember now but I suspect things weren't that different. |
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Andysmum | Report | 9 Feb 2024 14:48 |
The reason it didn't matter if you worked for the Civil Service was that you could have up to 6 months sick leave on full pay, followed by 3 months on half-pay, which was a far better deal than any government hand-outs. |
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nameslessone | Report | 9 Feb 2024 13:02 |
I can remember a training session when I first started work and the married women’s contribution was explained ( I wasn’t married). Once I heard there was no sick pay etc |
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Andysmum | Report | 9 Feb 2024 12:39 |
Pensions are certainly a lot more complicated than when I retired. At that time women retired at 60 and men at 65. Married women didn't get a pension, as their husbands got the married man's pension (about 50% more than the single pension). |
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nameslessone | Report | 9 Feb 2024 09:13 |
Wow! Post has just arrived. I am going to get the grand sum of About £180 a week. Made of of state pension of £169.50 and bits of other things like additional state pension. |
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maggiewinchester | Report | 8 Feb 2024 22:12 |
Good old Martin! <3 |
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Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it | Report | 8 Feb 2024 16:31 |
I will let her know :-( |
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