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Should I opt for a pension drawdown?

Chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning, Peter McGahan's latest column on pensions

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning(Image: © Richard Trainor)

In the fourth of my columns on retirement, let’s look a little closer at one of the options I talked about last week, Pension Drawdown.

At retirement date you are no longer forced to buy an annuity straight away, and so you can leave your pension fund invested and allow it to grow, whilst also benefitting from its Inheritance Tax benefits. Let me explain, as this is one of the most beneficial reasons for having a pension.

On death of the pension member, the benefits are passed to the beneficiaries free of Inheritance Tax. They do not form part of their estate. It makes sense, therefore, to maintain the value of the pension fund and spend where you can outside of that, in other words, other investments.

That benefit can then pass on to other generations over the years to draw from that pot what and when they need. Excellent.

If you have consulted with your Independent Financial Adviser (IFA) who is covering the whole of market, and they recommend drawdown, you then need to consider the options available.

A 65-year-old going into retirement drawdown has to consider how long they will need this benefit and access to income. Life expectancy in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ used to be very competitive in the 50s, ranking seventh in the world, but it’s now 29th .

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ delayed increasing the pension age any further because life expectancy is dropping. If you made it to age 50 as a male in 2006, your life expectancy was 86.3. Today, if you make it to 50, its age 83.9. For a female, it dropped from 89.3 to 86.7. That’s a lot of heartbeats, eyelash flutters, birthdays and smiles of your children/grandchildren to be missed. The worst trends in life expectancy are in the poorest communities.

Consider also that this pension fund could run through many generations, so it’s not just your life expectancy, it’s the term of the whole pension through generations.