Isn’t what you drawdown each year , 25% of that is tax free ?
So say if you have £100k pot , if you tell your pension provider in April say that want to drawdown £10k, then £2.5k is tax free and the other £7.5k gets taxed at whatever rate you paying ?
Or not ? I’m not certain on this
And the £90k left just stays in your pension pot invested
That's about it, but for most people your tax free annual allowance is £12500.
Example:
So lets say your want £1500 a month, so £18000 a year, but only £12500 will be tax free and you don't want to pay tax.
You need another £5,500.
So you work out that £5,500 times 4 is £ £22,000.
You "Crystallise" (withdraw) £22,000 from your pension.
Then tell them that you want £5,500 of tax free lump some paid into your current account and the remainder goes to a drawdown account, £16500
Take £12500 from your drawdown account which is your annual allowance and you pay no tax.
Add the £5,500 to it from your tax free lump sum and you have and you get £18000 in your hand for the year.
The remaining £4,000 sits in your drawn down account still with the pension provider but remains untaxed as you haven't taken it out of the system.
This then gains interest as your not touching it, just not at the same as the remaining amount in your pension at the tax free investment rate.
Obviously this means you're slowly moving money from your tax free main pension to a savings account, but at least your not paying tax.
Don't trust me on the maths and I'm happy to be put right by people who know about this stuff better than I do.