RI Allocated Pension and tax

When you open an RI Allocated Pension account, you might need to pay tax on the money you transfer from your super. How you’re taxed depends on whether you have a taxed fund, like GESB Super, or an untaxed fund, like West State Super or Gold State Super.

In general, you pay less tax when you transfer your super to an allocated pension, than you do if you take your super as a lump-sum payment. Find out more about paying tax when taking your super money out.

Your investment earnings are tax free and you could pay less tax

An RI Allocated Pension offers tax benefits, which means you might pay less tax than you would if you chose another type of investment. There are two ways you can benefit:

  • Investment earnings in your pension account are tax-exempt
  • If you’re 60 or over, your regular income payments and lump-sum payments from your pension are tax free

Here’s a summary of the tax rules that apply to your RI Allocated Pension account.

Different parts of your pension are taxed differently

Your RI Allocated Pension account may include two different parts or ‘components’. Each part is taxed differently, depending on where the funds come from. You might have:

  1. A tax-free component
  2. This is the tax-free part of your super benefit that was transferred to your pension account. You do not pay tax on this amount. For example, it would include personal contributions made to your super that you didn’t claim as a tax deduction. If you transferred from West State Super or Gold State Super, it would also include any part of your benefit that was taxed at 47% because your balance was above the untaxed plan cap.
  3. A taxable component
  4. This is the taxable part of your super benefit that was transferred to your pension account. You may pay tax on this part of your pension when you access it. For example, it would include employer and salary sacrifice contributions.

To find out more about the tax components of your pension account, please call your Member Services Centre on 13 43 72.

How tax applies to your regular income and lump-sum payments

The two tables below provide a summary of how tax applies to your regular income payments and any lump-sum payments from your RI Allocated Pension.

Tax treatment for the 'Taxable component - taxed element' of your pension account

Tax treatment for the 'Taxable component - taxed element' of your pension account
Age Lump-sum payments tax withheld rate (including 2% Medicare Levy) Income stream payments tax withheld rate (plus 2% Medicare Levy)

Under Commonwealth preservation age

22%

Taxed at your marginal tax rate, with no tax offset1

60+

Nil

Nil

Tax treatment for the 'Tax-free component' of your pension account

Tax treatment for the 'Tax-free component' of your pension account
Age Lump-sum payments tax withheld rate (including 2% Medicare Levy) Income stream payments tax withheld rate (plus 2% Medicare Levy)

Under Commonwealth preservation age

Nil

Nil

60+

Nil

Nil

You will pay no tax on income from your RI Allocated Pension if you’re aged 60 or over

If you are 60 or over, your regular income stream payments and any lump-sum payments from your RI Allocated Pension will be completely tax-free and you won’t need to include these payments in your personal income tax return.

Examples of how regular income payments are taxed

If your pension account has a tax-free and a taxable component, your regular income payments will include a proportional amount drawn from each component, based on the total value of your pension.

Here are two examples of how income payments are taxed according to your age and the components of your account.

Examples of RI Allocated Pension tax treatment based on age

Example 1: Fiona, aged over 60

Example 2: Frank, aged under 60

  • Fiona is 63 and transfers $250,000 to an RI Allocated Pension
  • Her $250,000 is made up of a $210,000 taxable component and a $40,000 tax-free component
  • She chooses monthly income payments of $1,600
  • Her monthly pension will include the following components:
    40,000/250,000 x 1,600 = tax free: $256
    210,000/250,000 x 1,600 = taxable-taxed: $1,344
    Tax free + taxable-taxed = $1,600

Fiona is over 60, so the total amount of her pension payment will be tax-free.

  • Frank is 57 and transfers $350,000 to an RI Allocated Pension
  • His $350,000 is made up of a $310,000 taxable component and a $40,000 tax free component
  • He chooses monthly income payments of $1,400
  • His monthly pension will include the following components:
    40,000/350,000 x 1,400 = tax free: $160
    310,000/350,000 x 1,400 = taxable-taxed: $1,240
    Tax free + taxable-taxed = $1,400

Frank is 57, so he will need to pay tax on the taxable-taxed component at his marginal tax rate (plus 2% Medicare Levy). A 15% tax offset on the taxable component is available to reduce the amount of tax he needs to pay. He will not pay tax on the tax-free component.

To learn more about how your RI Allocated Pension is taxed, you can:

1 Tax offset is available for a disability super benefit.

Page last updated 19 September 2024