Economy

I’m struggling on state pension – will taking a part-time job on £12.40 an hour make me better off? STEVE WEBB replies

I am collecting my state pension now, the new one. I can’t live on it easily, even after getting help with my rent, so I have been offered a part time job at £12.40 per hour over around 24 hours a week.

Do I only pay tax still on the job, in other words if it goes over the minimum for paying tax. Or do I have to lump together the pension and the wage and pay tax on all of it?

Basically, is it worth me working 24 hours a week at £12.40 per hour and losing the help from the council for rental assistance and also paying full council tax?

Steve Webb replies: For people of working age, the benefits system has been restructured to try to make it generally ‘pays to work’, even if only by a small amount.

But in your situation, as someone on benefit over pension age, I have to admit that you may not get much back if you take a job of the sort you have described.

Let’s break this down into three elements – the amount of extra tax you would pay if you took the job, the reduction in help with your rent and the reduction in help with your council tax.

Income tax bill

Starting with tax, from April this year the standard rate of the new state pension will be £12,547 per year, just a whisker below the (frozen) tax threshold of £12,570.

Broadly speaking, you can think of the state pension as ‘mopping up’ all of your tax free allowance.

This means that more or less all of your wage will be subject to income tax at the basic rate.

If you do 24 hours at £12.40 per hour, this will give you £297.60 per week. 

To keep the maths simple, let’s round that up to £300 per week. On this figure you would pay £60 in tax, leaving you take-home pay of £240 per week.

(The one bit of good news is that you no longer pay National Insurance Contributions now that you are over pension age.)

Help with rent

The next question is what impact an extra £240 per week will have on the help you get with rent.

In your situation, your housing benefit will fall by 65 per cent of any extra take-home pay, aside from a very small ‘disregarded’ amount of £5 per week. In this case, this would reduce your help with rent by up to £156 per week.

Help with council tax

Prior to 2013, there was a national system of help with council tax which was closely linked to the housing benefit rules. For each extra £1 of take-home pay you would lose 20p in help with council tax.

So, if those rules still applied today, your extra £240 per week would cost you £48 per week in council tax help. I strongly suspect that this would wipe out your help with council tax completely, especially if you already qualify for a 25 per cent discount for living alone.

In practice, the impact of having higher income on council tax help might be even more severe than this.

Each local authority in England is now free to design its own local council tax system and many have used this freedom to make the system even less generous than the 20p in the pound rule that used to apply.

As a result, it is even more likely that taking a job of the sort you describe would indeed wipe out any help you get with council tax.

Will taking a job improve your income?

Going back to the assumption of losing 20p in the pound of council tax help, out of your gross pay of £300 you would lose £60 in tax, up to £156 in help with rent and up to £48 in help with council tax. 

At worst, this would add up to £264 in deductions, leaving you just £36 better off per week for your 24 hours of work, and this is before factoring in any travel-to-work costs which you might face.

I should add that in doing these calculations I have assumed that you have literally no other income aside from your state pension and that you are therefore getting most of your rent and most of your council tax covered in full.

If this is not the case and you also have, for example, a modest private pension, this will already have reduced the amount of help you are currently getting with rent and council tax.   

This means that taking a job will potentially wipe out a smaller amount of housing benefit and council tax help, and so the financial uplift from working will be slightly greater.

Naturally, there could be other reasons for wanting to work, such as the social contact, and your employer can still be required to put you into a workplace pension and make a contribution, which could help marginally when you finally stop work.

But I’m afraid that the bottom line is that if you reach retirement with a very modest income and rely on benefits to cover major outgoings like rent and council tax, there is very limited financial advantage to you from taking a part-time job.

Ask Steve Webb a pension question

Former Pensions Minister Steve Webb is This Is Money’s Agony Uncle.

He is ready to answer your questions, whether you are still saving, in the process of stopping work, or juggling your finances in retirement.

Steve left the Department of Work and Pensions after the May 2015 election. He is now a partner at actuary and consulting firm Lane Clark & Peacock.

If you would like to ask Steve a question about pensions, please email him at pensionquestions@thisismoney.co.uk.

Steve will do his best to reply to your message in a forthcoming column, but he won’t be able to answer everyone or correspond privately with readers. Nothing in his replies constitutes regulated financial advice. Published questions are sometimes edited for brevity or other reasons.

Please include a daytime contact number with your message – this will be kept confidential and not used for marketing purposes.

If Steve is unable to answer your question, you can also contact MoneyHelper, a Government-backed organisation which gives free assistance on pensions to the public. It can be found here and its number is 0800 011 3797.

Steve receives many questions about state pension forecasts and COPE ¿ the Contracted Out Pension Equivalent. If you are writing to Steve on this topic, he responds to a typical reader question here. It includes links to Steve’s several earlier columns about state pension forecasts and contracting out, which might be helpful.  

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