Six years of frozen tax thresholds mean more pensioners on low incomes are likely to have to pay taxes. Pensioners could near the 20% basic rate tax band with no increase in tax allowance until 2028.
![Frozen Tax Thresholds Effect on Pensioners with Low Incomes [Photo: Bylines Cymru]](https://s3.us-west-1.amazonaws.com/southarkansassun.com/2023/09/Pension-credit-Age-Cymru-750x536-1.webp)
Frozen Tax Thresholds Effect on Pensioners with Low Incomes [Photo: Bylines Cymru]
According to Sheldon, the Head of Pension and Savings Interactive Investor Alice Guy explained that the frozen tax thresholds could result in the incomes rising with inflation but with the thresholds remaining the same. To date, the threshold for paying taxes is at £12,570. This suggests that any income above that threshold will be taxed at 20% until the income reaches a higher tax band.
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Impact of Frozen Tax Thresholds
An article in Ground News states that Guy further explained that the frozen tax thresholds are indirect taxes as not many individuals take notice of them. However, during high inflation, Guy states that it is an effective policy that will heavily impact an individual’s spending power.
Further reports say to date, the full new state pension is at £203.85 a week or around £10,600 per year. On the other hand, the full basic state pension is at £156.20 a week or around £8,122 per year.
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