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The government has taken steps to encourage people in work to make significant provisions for their retirement, as most people have around 20 years of retirement to look forward to. These are some key points:
Auto-enrolment came into force on 1 October 2012 and applied to all UK-based employers. There were various staging dates, according to how many qualifying staff were employed by any given organisation. See the staging table below:
120,000 or more
50,000-119,999
30,000-49,999
20,000-29,999
10,000-19,999
6,000-9,999
4,100-5,999
4,000-4,099
3,000-3,999
2,000-2,999
1,250-1,999
800-1,249
500-799
350-499
250-349
1 October 2012
1 November 2012
1 January 2013
1 February 2013
1 March 2013
1 April 2013
1 May 2013
1 June 2013
1 July 2013
1 August 2013
1 September 2013
1 October 2013
1 November 2013
1 January 2013
1 February 2013
The employer pays: |
The employee pays: |
The Government adds tax relief of: |
Total contribution: |
1.0% of the qualifying earnings until 6 April 2018 |
0.8% of the qualifying earnings until 6 April 2018 |
0.2% of the qualifying earnings until 6 April 2018 |
2.0% of the qualifying earnings until 6 April 2018 |
rising to 2.0% until 6 April 2019 |
rising to 2.4% until 6 April 2019 |
rising to 0.6% until 6 April 2019 |
rising to 5.0% until 6 April 2019 |
then rising to 3.0% |
then rising to 4.0% |
then rising to 1.0% |
then rising to 8.0% |
The legislation includes agency workers in its definition of 'worker', including those on agency payroll, meaning that the agency will have to contribute for contractors working on their payroll. Umbrella employees also fall within the scope. Limited company contractors do not fall within the scope. Three categories of workers have been identified:
People who'll need to be automatically enrolled into a qualifying scheme, with the ability to opt out. They must be at least 22 years old and below state pension age, work in the UK, and earn more than the current threshold of £10,000 per year.
People who aren't eligible for auto enrolment but can opt in to a qualifying pension scheme if they choose. They must work in the UK, be aged between 16 and 74 and have earnings between £5,824 and £10,000 per year. Alternatively, they are aged between 16 and 21, or aged between the state pension age and 74 and earn over the current threshold of £10,000 per year.
People who are aged between 16 and 74, earn less than the lower earnings amount of £5824 per year and work, or ordinarily work in the UK. Entitled workers have the right to ask to join a workplace pension but the employer is not obliged to make contributions.
The legislation clearly sets out the information and timeframes that employers and agencies will be required to give to their workers. Penalties can be applied for non-compliance.
We were advised by leading legal firm Eversheds on implementing the new legislation. We chose the enrolment provider, NEST and we meet our obligations set by TPR and DWP.
M Kwiatkwki, Multi-Trader
D. Mackinlay, Project Manager
J. Roome, Accept Engineering
Steph O'Connor, Head of CORE for Experis UK
For efficient, compliant support, choose PayStream.
Call agency support on 0161 971 8979 or email agency_support@paystream.co.uk
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