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pensions valuation

 

£25 Actuarial Report
  £25 Actuarial Report values a defined benefit scheme. It takes only 10 minutes online and gives you a 5-page report signed off by an accreted actuary click here  
  Pension values 30% greater than the CETV.
On divorce find out if the provider quote values the pensions fairly. Start here by comparing some valuation examples
 
 
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Valuation examples
 
£25 Actuarial Report
  more topics:
  valuation summary £25 Actuarial Report
  information required specimen report
  uniformed valuation valuation FAQs
  £50 Uniformed Report report suitability
 

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The £25 Actuarial Report should only be used for a Defined Benefit (final salary) pension scheme. It is normally cost effective where the CETV is greater than £30,000, however, there is no reason why you should not run a valuation on pensions worth less than £30,000, other than the fact that the likely difference in values may not justify the small cost. If the pensionholder is a police officer, fire & rescue services, armed forces or prison officer a different calculation is required where an appropriate valuation of three times the CETV value is not uncommon. See an example of the uniformed services valuation.

If the pension is a money purchase scheme such as a stakeholder personal pension, the quotation from the provider will show the actual value of the pension after charges and this report cannot be used in these cases. The following are Defined Benefit schemes available for the public and private sectors showing different cases of age, earnings, years in scheme and actual valuations the Actuarial Report has produced.

  Old Public scheme Good Private scheme  
  New Public scheme Average Private scheme  


Old public sector scheme
Generally this is for public service or sector employees who started before 2005. The benefits at retirement are a pension of 1/80th of final salary per year of service, plus a lump sum of 3/80th of final salary per year of service. Maximum pension after 40 years is therefore half of final salary. The tables give results from the £25 Actuarial Report and assumes the pensionholder is male, scheme retirement age is 65 and if 'In Service' remains so for 3 years after the pension valuation date.

Old Public Scheme - In Service
  Details:
Case A Case B Case C Case D
  Current age (yrs)
36 44 52 60
  Current earnings
£25,000 £30,000 £35,000 £40,000
  In scheme (yrs)
15 20 25 30
  Valuation
£62,890 £119,152 £212,076 £339,670

The table assumes the pensionholder left the sponsoring employer service from 2 years to 11 years ago for the cases shown.

Old Public Scheme - Left Service
  Details:
Case A Case B Case C Case D
  Current age (yrs)
38 46 54 62
  Last earnings
£23,000 £24,000 £25,000 £26,000
  In scheme (yrs)
15 20 25 30
  Left service (yrs)
2 5 8 11
  Valuation
£61,188 £111,303 £186,158 £285,047


New public sec
tor scheme
Generally this is for public service or sector employees who started after 2005. The benefits at retirement are a pension of 1/60th of final salary per year of service. Taking a lump sum at retirement would require commuting the pension benefit. Maximum pension after 40 years is therefore two-thirds of final salary. The tables give results from the £25 Actuarial Report and assumes the pensionholder is male, scheme retirement age is 65 and if 'In Service' remains so for 3 years after the pension valuation date.

  Details
Case A Case B Case C Case D
  Age
45 50 55 60
  Earnings
£35,000 £40,000 £45,000 £50,000
  Years in
scheme
2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5
  Valuation
£20,438 £27,056 £34,508 £41,342


Good private sector scheme
Generally provided by FTSE100 companies, financial services firms and similar employers. Often these schemes are only available to management and not all the employees are eligible and benefits at retirement are a pension of 1/60th of final salary per year of service. Taking a lump sum at retirement would require commuting the pension benefit. Maximum pension after 40 years is therefore two-thirds of final salary. The tables give results from the £25 Actuarial Report and assumes the pensionholder is male, time in the scheme is from 10 to 25 years, scheme retirement age is 65 and if 'In Service' remains so for 3 years after the pension valuation date.

Good Private Scheme - In Service
  Details:
Case A Case B Case C Case D
  Current age (yrs)
36 44 52 60
  Current earnings
£28,000 £35,000 £40,000 £45,000
  In scheme (yrs)
10 15 20 25
  Valuation
£56,513 £126,427 £233,561 £379,029

The table assumes the pensionholder left the sponsoring employer service from 7 years to 16 years ago for the cases shown.

Good Private Scheme - Left Service
  Details:
Case A Case B Case C Case D
  Current age (yrs)
38 46 54 62
  Last earnings
£20,000 £21,000 £22,000 £23,000
  In scheme (yrs)
10 15 20 25
  Left service (yrs)
7 10 13 16
  Valuation
£48,628 £98,782 £180,956 £284,249


Average private sector scheme
Generally provided by other employers, including many smaller firms. The benefits at retirement are a pension of 1/80th of final salary per year of service. Taking a lump sum at retirement would require commuting the pension benefit. Maximum pension after 40 years is therefore two-thirds of final salary. The tables give results from the £25 Actuarial Report and assumes the pensionholder is male, scheme retirement age is 65 and if 'In Service' remains so for 3 years after the pension valuation date.

Average Private Scheme - In Service
  Details:
Case A Case B Case C Case D
  Current age (yrs)
39 46 53 60
  Current earnings
£25,000 £29,000 £34,000 £39,000
  In scheme (yrs)
12 17 21 25
  Valuation
£48,081 £96,306 £156,456 £243,821

The table assumes the pensionholder left the sponsoring employer service from 8 years to 16 years ago for the cases shown.

Average Private Scheme - Left Service
  Details:
Case A Case B Case C Case D
  Current age (yrs)
41 48 55 62
  Last earnings
£17,000 £18,000 £19,000 £20,000
  In scheme (yrs)
12 17 21 25
  Left service (yrs)
8 10 13 16
  Valuation
£40,131 £73,461 £124,261 £184,190

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