Pensions Pots - How much do you need?

Sorry to ask what may be a stupid, but I could just set up a SIPP with one of those companies and away I go?
 
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Yes

For example I have one with Interactive Investor.

I had to set up an Investment Account first, which costs £10 a month, and then the SIPP which costs another £9.99 I think. I also have an ISA which costs no extra.

They offset the charges against the cost of Trades, so I rarely pay dealing fees.

At one time they charged extra for pensions in drawdown, but have stopped now.

They reclaim the 20% income tax on pension contributions from HMRC and add it to your pension account.

I transferred in some small company pensions, and moved a cash ISA into the ISA. Transfers do not use up your annual allowance.
 
This one might be members only

https://www.which.co.uk/money/inves...stment-platform-fees-and-charges-aqzb27v3lwsp

Vanguard looks the cheapest as long as you only want funds, and are happy to be tied to only their own. It looks to me like they charge 0.15% p.a. for a SIPP but you had better check.

A flat fee is better value for a larger account.

https://www.ii.co.uk/acq/sipp-offer?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIz76y_6HH8wIVl853Ch1GIgyHEAAYASAAEgJzb_D_BwE

If you paid in £10,000 a year for 40 years, and had good growth, a percentage fee would pay them a huge amount.

Investment companies know that.

"In a 2020 investigation, Which? found that the difference between the cheapest and most expensive drawdown plans for a £250,000 pot was a staggering £12,300 lost in charges over a 20 year period."

Edit
It looks like Vanguard also come top in the "Which" customer ratings.
 
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I have a 'Portfolio Bond' with Aviva, into which in Sept 2008 I invested £10K and just left untouched since then. It is now valued at £16,826.00 - I would be interested in opinion as to how people think that has done.
 
You probably had some bad years in there, but it’s barely managed 4%. Still better than any bank account.

A ftse 250 tracker would have got you another 10k
 
I have a 'Portfolio Bond' with Aviva, into which in Sept 2008 I invested £10K and just left untouched since then. It is now valued at £16,826.00 - I would be interested in opinion as to how people think that has done.

Did it have a Life Assurance element?

It might have had mixed content. Shares, bonds, cash, property. Intended to be balanced (I.e. low) risk, and hence return.

2007/8 had a big crash followed by a big recovery in 2009, so you might have got in at the bottom.

You may have been hit badly by the pandemic, and had 5 years of Brexit damage. A 68% rise since 2008 is reasonable, not out of the ordinary. I know someone who has done about the same, but was up 140% in December 2019, before the pandemic crash. She had invested in what had previously been a stable and reliable investment trust. Though she will also have received dividend income. I see she gained 50% in the last 12 months, from a terrible low.
 
A ftse 250 tracker would have got you another 10k

This^^

TBH, your return is not great. Trackers are not zero risk, but you can't go far wrong over time. A few well chosen funds can beat the trackers, but in my experience, not by much.
 
There are very good reasons why you not taught about £money at skool.

At a relatively early stage in my working life I earned a **** load of money. I had many professional £money people chasing me with their best advice & yet the only one I remember was an old bloke in a pub in the deepest depths of the Derbyshire countryside, he was the only one who seemed to make sense to me.

Pensions, & the provision of your income when you no longer choose to earn from your vocation of choice is a very important subject & should NOT be taken lightly.

Diynot forum & especially JohnD (the Marxist revolutionary) isn't & should not be considered a font of knowledge in all matters pertaining to pensions & your sources of income when you reach an age that you are free of the term "wage slave".
 
Pensions, & the provision of your income when you no longer choose to earn from your vocation of choice is a very important subject & should NOT be taken lightly.

This is true. However, advice is advice wherever it comes from, which you can choose to take or ignore. You might say that financial advice in a DIYnot forum isn't worth anything. However, it has one very significant benefit - the people here have no vested interest, so the advice is just personal experience. Anyone with a vested interest, whether fee or commission, is to some extent going to advise something that benefits them as well.
 
Marxist revolutionary

take care not to belleve anything brig says.


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