NHS Pension Annual Allowance, pension savings statements, tapered allowance, carry-forward and Scheme Pays

NHS Pension Annual Allowance for Doctors

We help NHS consultants, GPs, locum doctors and higher earners review annual allowance tax charges, pension savings statements, tapered annual allowance, carry-forward, Scheme Pays, McCloud remedy, RPSS corrections and Self Assessment reporting.

Annual allowance calculation for NHS Pension Scheme members and doctors with other pensions Tapered annual allowance review using NHS salary, GP profit, private income, dividends and rental income Scheme Pays and Self Assessment support where a pension tax charge needs reporting
Why annual allowance needs care

For NHS doctors, pension growth is not the same as pension contributions.

Annual allowance tax is based on pension input, not simply the employee pension deductions shown on payslips. Defined benefit growth in the NHS Pension Scheme can be affected by pensionable pay, service, revaluation, scheme section, McCloud remedy, promotion, clinical excellence awards, GP profit and inflation-linked calculations.

Pension input

The pension savings statement is the starting point, not the whole answer.

The pension input amount must be reviewed alongside income, tapering, carry-forward, other pensions and previous Self Assessment entries.

Tapering

High income can reduce the annual allowance available.

NHS salary, GP profits, private practice, locum income, dividends, rental income and investment income can affect adjusted income and threshold income.

Reporting

The tax return must match the calculation and Scheme Pays position.

If an annual allowance charge arises, the Self Assessment return needs accurate pension tax entries, Scheme Pays details and a clear calculation trail.

The annual allowance review route

We check pension input, income, tapering, carry-forward and payment route before filing.

A proper annual allowance review connects the NHS pension savings statement with total income, unused allowance from earlier years, any other pension contributions and the final Self Assessment position.

01

Statement review

Pension savings statement, RPSS, pension input amount, scheme section and years affected.

02

Income review

NHS salary, GP profit, private practice, locum income, dividends, rental income and other income.

03

Taper test

Threshold income, adjusted income and whether the standard annual allowance is reduced.

04

Carry-forward

Unused allowance from the previous three tax years before calculating the final charge.

05

Reporting

Self Assessment entries, Scheme Pays amount, HMRC notes and future planning points.

Current annual allowance figures

Key pension tax thresholds doctors should check.

These figures are only the starting point. The final charge depends on pension input, total income, tapering, carry-forward, other pensions and tax rate.

£60k

Standard annual allowance

The standard annual allowance is currently £60,000 before any tapering or carry-forward adjustment.

Standard allowance
£200k

Threshold income test

If threshold income is £200,000 or less, tapering should not apply even if adjusted income is above the adjusted income limit.

Taper gateway
£260k

Adjusted income limit

If adjusted income is over £260,000 and threshold income is over £200,000, the annual allowance may be tapered.

Taper trigger
£10k

Minimum tapered allowance

The tapered annual allowance can reduce to a minimum of £10,000 for very high earners.

Minimum allowance
Common annual allowance issues

Annual allowance points doctors often need reviewed.

The calculation can be affected by income changes, scheme changes, private practice, GP profits, other pensions and McCloud remedy adjustments.

PSS

Pension savings statement

Review of pension input amounts, opening and closing values, scheme sections and whether a charge may arise.

Review statement →
Taper

Tapered annual allowance

Review where NHS income, private practice, GP profit, dividends or rental income may reduce the allowance.

Review taper →
CF

Carry-forward

Unused allowance from the previous three years may reduce or remove the charge before Scheme Pays is considered.

Check carry-forward →
RPSS

McCloud Remedy and RPSS

Remediable Pension Savings Statements can change annual allowance charges for earlier years.

RPSS review →
What we can help with

NHS pension annual allowance support for doctors.

We can calculate the charge, review tapering, check carry-forward, advise on Scheme Pays and prepare the Self Assessment entries.

01

Annual allowance calculation

Calculation of pension input, standard allowance, tapering, carry-forward and annual allowance tax charge.

Start enquiry →
02

Pension savings statement review

Review of NHS pension savings statements, pension input amounts and years where the standard allowance is exceeded.

Review statement →
03

Tapered annual allowance review

Calculation of threshold income, adjusted income, NHS income, private income and final tapered allowance.

Tax planning →
04

Carry-forward calculation

Review of unused annual allowance from the previous three tax years and interaction with current-year pension input.

Check carry-forward →
05

Scheme Pays advice

Review of whether to pay personally or use Scheme Pays, including election amount and Self Assessment reporting.

Scheme Pays →
06

Self Assessment pension tax entries

Preparation of annual allowance tax charge entries, Scheme Pays boxes, disclosure notes and HMRC calculation support.

Self Assessment →
Private income and tapering

Private practice income can change the pension tax result.

A doctor may be below the taper threshold from NHS salary alone, but exceed it once private practice income, locum work, GP profits, dividends, rental profit or other taxable income is included. That can reduce the annual allowance and increase the annual allowance tax charge.

We review the full income position alongside the pension input amount before deciding whether a charge arises, whether carry-forward helps, and whether Scheme Pays should be considered.

Statement

A statement does not automatically mean tax is due.

Carry-forward and the final tapered allowance must be checked before deciding whether an annual allowance charge arises.

Taper

High income can reduce the allowance.

Doctors with private practice, GP profit or company income should check adjusted income and threshold income carefully.

Scheme Pays

Scheme Pays must match the tax calculation.

The amount elected should agree with the annual allowance charge and the amount reported on Self Assessment.

McCloud

RPSS figures can change earlier years.

McCloud Remedy can alter pension input amounts for earlier years, creating refunds, extra charges or revised Scheme Pays positions.

Records needed

What we usually need for an annual allowance review.

The exact records depend on whether this is a current-year charge, historic correction, Scheme Pays decision or McCloud/RPSS review.

Pension

Pension savings statement, RPSS, NHS Pension Scheme section, pension input amount and previous year pension input figures.

Income

P60s, payslips, GP partnership statements, private practice income, locum income, dividends and rental income.

Tax returns

Previous Self Assessment returns, pension tax entries, computations and HMRC statements.

Scheme Pays

Any Scheme Pays election forms, NHS Pension confirmations, amendment forms and payment details.

Other pensions

Personal pension, SIPP, AVC or other pension contribution details for the year and carry-forward years.

How we work

A clear process for NHS annual allowance calculations and reporting.

We calculate first, then review payment route, then prepare the Self Assessment position.

Pension and income review

We review pension statements, income sources, tax returns, other pensions and any earlier Scheme Pays elections.

Annual allowance calculation

We calculate standard allowance, tapering, carry-forward, excess pension input and tax charge.

Payment route review

We review whether the charge should be paid personally, through Scheme Pays or corrected through an HMRC route.

Self Assessment and next steps

We prepare pension tax entries, Scheme Pays boxes, disclosure notes and future planning points as agreed.

Annual allowance FAQs

Common questions from doctors about NHS pension annual allowance.

These answers are general guidance only. The correct position depends on pension input, income, tapering, carry-forward and Scheme Pays records.

What is the pension annual allowance?

It is the maximum pension saving allowed in a tax year before an annual allowance tax charge may arise. For NHS defined benefit pensions, this is based on pension growth, not simply employee contributions.

Does a pension savings statement mean I owe tax?

Not always. It means the pension input amount should be checked against the annual allowance, tapering rules and carry-forward before deciding whether a charge arises.

Can private practice income affect annual allowance?

Yes. Additional income can affect adjusted income and threshold income, which can reduce the annual allowance through tapering.

Can carry-forward reduce the charge?

Yes. Unused annual allowance from the previous three tax years can reduce or remove the current-year charge if the conditions are met.

Can Scheme Pays be used for annual allowance charges?

It may be available, depending on the charge and scheme rules. The amount elected should be checked against the tax calculation and Self Assessment entries.

Need help with an NHS pension annual allowance charge?

Send a short summary of the tax year, your NHS role, pension savings statement received, estimated charge and whether Scheme Pays has been used or considered. We will confirm the records needed and the next step.