2012 wrote:Increase your pension contribution to the maximum allowed by law (I think it's 20k) you'll get some good tax relief.
Yeah 20k is deductible for tax purposes per month
The insurance thing doesn't help much. While if you are deducting pension the entire amount upto 20k is deductible before computing tax, for insurance the relief is only 15% of the premium you pay and is capped at 5000 bob.
For example you earn 50k, you listen to those 'financial advisors' from Britam/Jubilee/ICEA...
You buy those funny insurance plans where you pay 10k premium monthly
Taxable pay=50,000-(15%*10,000)-200(nssf)-1162(personal relief)
On the other hand, if you take a pension for 10k
Taxable pay=50,000-10,000(pension)-200(nssf)-1162(personal relief)
So avoid those insurance plans if the purpose is to make tax savings. They give you very little and you can lose all your money if you fail to contribute. The reason they always want to sell them to you is that's where they make money. There's almost no money in pension for insurance companies!