95 – All you need to know about bequests, marriage in community of property, capital gains tax and more

by | Oct 15, 2024 | Estate Planning, Financial Planning, Tax

Question

I have a number of questions regarding the abovementioned topics:

Answer

Correctly structuring your income when you retire is one of the most important decisions of your financial life.  If you get it wrong, you could end up paying far too much tax on your retirement income. In addition to this, your heirs could end up paying more estate duty than they need to.

 

I would need to know more information about your situation before I can give you specific advice, however, I will run through a couple of principles that you can consider.

 

Move some of your investments out of interest-bearing investments into growth investments

Keeping too much of your money in interest bearing investments is a very lazy way of going about managing your finances. While you know exactly what you’re going to be getting as a return, the downside is that once you have exceeded your annual interest exemption, all this income is taxed at your marginal rate.

 

If, however, you moved some of your investments into categories where you receive a high level of dividend income or capital growth, you can reduce your tax payable significantly.

 

Retirement annuity contributions

Even though you are on pension, you are still allowed to make retirement annuity contributions. You can contribute 27.5% of your income to a retirement annuity and have this come off your income tax.  This is a very efficient way of reducing your tax bill and moving assets out of your estate.

 

Disallowed retirement contributions

You are allowed to contribute more than 27.5% of your income to a retirement annuity. These additional contributions are called disallowed contributions. While these disallowed contributions don’t give you an immediate tax break, they do offer a tax benefit when you mature the investment. You can either take it as a tax-free lump sum or you can use it to provide you with a tax-free income for a period.

 

Using these disallowed contributions to provide a tax free income provides you with a fantastic way to reduce the tax that you pay.

 

For example,

If you had R9m in your pension fund and R9m in the bank, your income after tax would be R744 005

 

 

Capital

Income

Less Tax

After tax income

Pension with 6% drawdown

R9,000,000

R540,000

 

 

Interest @ 6%

R9,000,000

R540,000

 

 

 

 

R1,080,000

R301,495

R744,005

 

 

Now, if you took R5m from the bank and invested it as a disallowed contribution to an RA.  You could then mature this RA and invest it in a living annuity where you should be getting a return that would be higher than the inflation rate.

 

You can withdraw these disallowed contributions as a tax-free income. 

 

I chose a drawdown rate of R300 000 a year to get to roughly the same after-tax income as the first scenario.  As a result, I was able to reduce the drawdown on the living annuity from 6% to 3.8% which will allow for a better capital build up over time.

 

We now have:

 

Capital

Income

less Tax

After tax income

Pension with 3.8% drawdown

R9,000,000

R340,000

 

 

Interest @ 6%

R4,000,000

R240,000

 

 

 

 

R580,000

R106,567

R473,433

Annuity income from Disallowed Contribution

R5,000,000

R300,000

 

 

 

 

R880,000

R106,567

R773,433

 

Through this, we were able to reduce the taxable income by R200 000 a year without a material change to the after-tax income. 

 

The tax-free drawdowns from the disallowed contributions will last for 16 years.  At that stage you should have built up a strong capital base by having run your living annuity at a 3.8% drawdown instead of 6%.

 

As you can see, with a bit of planning you can build up more wealth and pay a lot less tax.

KENNY MEIRING IS AN INDEPENDENT FINANCIAL ADVISER

Contact him via phone, email or via contact phone on the financialwellnesscoach.co.za website

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