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Major DWP State Pension update as millions to receive boost from April

By Charlotte Fisher

Copyright manchestereveningnews

Major DWP State Pension update as millions to receive boost from April

The Department for Work and Pensions ( DWP ) has issued a State Pension update as millions of over-66s are set to receive a financial boost from April. People on the new full State Pension are set for a rise of over £500 a year from next April following the latest official earnings data. State Pensions increase each April by the triple lock – a mechanism used to ensure the payment rates rise each year in line with whichever is higher out of inflation, earnings or 2.5%. This is to prevent the value of pensions being reduced by cost of living pressures. The latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed a rise in total wage growth including bonuses to 4.7% in the quarter to July, up from 4.6% in the three months to June. Never miss a story with the MEN’s daily Catch Up newsletter – get it in your inbox by signing up here However, the new rate will not be confirmed until inflation figures for September are published in October. It is unlikely that the rate of Consumer Prices Index will be higher than 4.7%. Inflation currently stands at 3.8%, with the latest data for August due out on Wednesday. Experts said this means the wage rise will be used to calculate the figure for the annual increase, putting pensioners on track for a 4.7% uplift in the State Pension next year. However, the wage growth figures are subject to revision when next month’s jobs market data are released. It comes after the rate of State Pension went up by 4.1% in April earlier this year in line with the growth in average earnings. Pat McFadden, the Work and Pensions Secretary, confirmed the Government’s election manifesto promise on the pensions triple lock would be honoured. He said: “This Labour government is committed to maintaining the triple Lock for the course of this Parliament. “It is estimated that will mean a rise in the state pension of around £1,900 a year by the end of the Parliament. “That’s a commitment from the Labour government to the UK’s pensioners.” Hargreaves Lansdown said that based on a rise of 4.7%, this would see a full new State Pension increase from its current level of £230.25 per week to £241.05 per week from April. Those retiring on the basic State Pension would see their weekly income increase from £176.45 per week to £184.75. Helen Morrissey, head of retirement analysis at Hargreaves Lansdown, warned the increase in the State Pension would put many pensioners close to the threshold for paying income tax. She said: “If they receive the 4.7% uplift it takes their annual state pension to around £12,535 per year which leaves them just a whisker under the threshold of paying basic rate tax.” Join the Manchester Evening News WhatsApp group HERE Former Liberal Democrat pensions minister Sir Steve Webb, who is now a partner at consultants LCP (Lane Clark & Peacock), said: “The standard rate of the new State Pension is creeping ever closer to the frozen personal tax allowance. “Indeed, we know for certain that someone who has no other income aside from the new State Pension will be a taxpayer come April 2027. “It is already the case that nearly three quarters of all pensioners pay income tax, and the ongoing freeze in tax thresholds coupled with steady rises in the pension will drag more and more into the tax net.” Ms Morrissey cautioned that next April’s pension increase would “add further pressure on the Government who are battling an already burgeoning State Pension bill”. She said: “The Government has committed to keeping the triple lock in place for the rest of this Parliament but longer term its future could be uncertain. “With a review into State Pension age also ongoing, other options could include an extension of the current timetable with dates for State Pension age running into the late 60s and beyond.”