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The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

QA42 - Listener Questions, Episode 42

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

Pete Matthew

Education, Business, Investing

4.91.7K Ratings

🗓️ 18 March 2026

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Pete Matthew and Roger Weeks cover self-employed saving rates, inheritance tax and estate planning, and how dividends are treated inside pension drawdown (including SIPPs). They also discuss salary sacrifice and contribution limits, the pros and cons of recycling tax-free cash, and whether to overpay your mortgage or invest via a Stocks & Shares ISA.


Shownotes: https://meaningfulmoney.tv/QA42 

01:07  Question 1

Hi Pete and Roger,

Thank you for your amazing podcast!
My question is about budgeting & savings percentages:
Should you aim for a % of your gross pay or your net pay when it comes to aiming for a savings percentage? e.g. Invest 20% of gross or net?

I'm self employed and work contract to contract. From each contract payment I have to give 25% to agents and lawyers. Then I get paid the rest and have to put aside some of the money ready for the Tax man.

When planning for how much I should save / invest from each contract payment should I be putting aside:
20% of the original contract amount? (which would be prior to the agents taking their cut and prior to the tax man taking his cut?)
20% of the amount left after the agents but prior to the tax man?
Or 20% after both the agent cut and tax man cut?
Thank you! Isabel


05:50  Question 2

I am a 70 year old widow with no children.  My current net worth is about £2 million. This is made of of a house (£500,000), savings and investments (£1,150,000) and a drawdown pension pot of £350,000 which I inherited from my husband.  My husband died aged 68 so the pension pot is currently tax free.

I plan to leave our inheritance tax free allowances of £650,000 to family, mostly nephews and nieces and the reminder to charities.  The drawdown pension will also go to named family members until the rules change in 2027 after which this will also go to charity.   I understand that this would mean my estate wouldn't be subject to inheritance tax.  Am I right about this? Is there anything I might not have thought about or any flaws in my thinking?

Thank you for your very informative podcast,
Susan


08:24  Question 3

Hi Pete and Roger, 

I'm still catching up on the back catalogue and am still loving the show, the listener questions are a great alternative, absolutely brilliant :)

My mind has been wandering as it usually does, and this time thinking about my retirement plan and what dividends will look like at retirement. I have some queries I would love you to clarify please if possible.

As it stands I have a combination of SIPP and stocks & shares ISAs all globally diversified with various stocks and ETFs etc and also a NHS DB pension.  I'm about to turn 49 and planning on a retirement at around 60. I'm trying to plan in the most tax efficient way (obviously this may change with future governments). For now though I am trying to max out my ISAs regularly for the tax free benefits and in particular focussing on a goal of using global ETF high yield dividends as income  annually at retirement. I have a Vanguard SIPP with 3 ETFs. I plan to take the 25% tax free amount from this when I retire. The rest (75%) I plan to leave as is, in the same ETFs and as they will hopefully still be paying dividends, I am a little confused as to how these will be regarded, such as for tax purposes? My assumption is the dividends will be added as cash to my now 75% remaining pot and then if I start to drawdown on this then I guess I will be taxed as normal depending on my tax status at the time only on what I drawdown as income. However when the dividends are added to my drawdown (75%) portfolio will this be part of my annual tax free (currently £500) dividend allowance OR will they not count as they are in my "pension pot" (and not classed as income) as is the case currently pre-retirement?

At the present should I actually be adding the dividends that I currently receive in my pension pot to my annual tax free allowance (£500 for me)? (I assumed dividends in a SIPP don't need declaring/adding up towards your annual tax free dividend allowance).

I hope that all makes sense?
Thanks for all your work with the podcasts and Listener Questions too, you guys are awesome!

Cheers lads,
Jon


13:22 Question 4

Dear Pete and Roger,

I've just turned off lifestyling on my pension thanks to your excellent podcast and videos. You may have saved me thousands so many thanks!

I now have a cunning plan!
I work for a university and have a hybrid pension with the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS).

Payments for my regular defined benefit (DB) pension are made via salary sacrifice. I'm also making additional voluntary contributions to the defined contribution (DC) part of USS, also by salary sacrifice. I've increased these DC payments to a level where my reduced effective pay is just above the level of the National Living Wage.

As all my USS contributions, DB and DC, are made by salary sacrifice, they count as employer contributions. As I understand it, I am also allowed to make employee pension contributions to an entirely separate SIPP up to the full level of my Relevant Earnings, which in my case is my salary alone. Is that correct? If so, am I allowed to make employee contributions up to the level of my original salary (before salary sacrifice reductions)? Or am I only allowed to make employee contributions up to the level or my reduced salary (after salary sacrifice), just above the level of the National Living Wage?

Is my plan a sound one or is it a cunning plan worthy of Baldrick?
I'm 54 years old and a basic rate tax payer with a salary of about £37,000 per annum. I do not expect to be promoted.

Simon


17:56  Question 5

Hi Pete and Roger,

Long time listener and watcher on YouTube and think it is absolutely wonderful all the free good advice you put out there. I hope you give yourselves a pat on the back for helping so many people build their wealth and no doubt have a better future in their latter years than they would have had without you.

As I reach a certain age I am pondering a strategy and was wondering if you could advise if this is a flawed approach, letting the tax tail wag the dog or perfectly valid. I've never heard anyone suggest it and can't believe that I have an idea that experts haven't thought of.

It involves recycling tax free lump sums from an existing DC pension. My understanding is that you have to "break" ALL the conditions to breach the recycling rules and the one I am considering not breaking is "tax free lump sum is less than £7,500 in any 12 month period".

The idea is this:
- Crystalise 30K. £22.5K into a drawdown pot and left untouched so as to not trigger the MPAA. £7.5K tax free cash withdrawn
- Take the £7.5K tax free cash and recycle it into a new SIPP
- Benefit from 40% tax relief to gain an additional £5K
- Do the same a year later and repeat until actual retirement

If I did this for the 10 years between first accessing my DC pension and retiring from employment at state pension age that's an extra £50K "free". The only downside I can see is that by crystalising you remove a portion of your existing DC pot from being able to have a 25% tax free slice of a bigger pie in the future. However I would have thought by putting the tax relief and tax free cash into a new SIPP, plus 25% of that total being tax free second time around when withdrawn, it would outweigh the downside, particularly if you think you're going to be a lower rate tax payer in actual retirement. Any thoughts gratefully received.

Keep up the great work and fantastic content.

Kind Regards, Tom


24:40  Question 6

Hi Rodge & Pete
Love the energy of the show, both educational and also very funny one of my favourite financial podcasts!

I recently purchased my first home solo at 35 on a 39 year mortgage term which takes me above the standard retirement age and I do hope I am not working full time by the age of 74. I went with the longer mortgage term to keep monthly costs down initially with the plan to possibly review this when my fixed term comes to end in 2030.

I contribute monthly to my S&S ISA currently £200 with the plan to double this in 2026 but should I be diverting some of these funds instead to overpay the mortgage? I'm conflicted about this as I believe I will get better returns on the S&S ISA over the 39 year period vs saving interest on the mortgage.

I currently contribute to my employer DC pension and also have a fully funded 3 month emergency fund so any spare cash can be put to work for my future.

Thanks, Chantelle

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

What's the point of announcing something in 2025 to happen in 2029? Because it sounds good and they can change their minds before they get there. Hi, and welcome back to another meaningful money Q&A with me, Pete Matthew. And apparently me, Roger Weeks. Apparently, it's good job. And we're doing, Roger. We're now answering questions from September 2025. So we're about six months behind. Racing towards the final line. Yeah, the final line is moving away from us. That's a problem

0:24.5

It's like from September 2025, so we're about six months behind. Racing towards the final line.

0:21.2

Yeah, the final line is moving away from us. That's the problem. It's like trying to spend down your pension. You're trying to spend it, and the investments just bring more money in, and you never get to the end. That's flawless segue. Well done. Yes, but please do keep them coming in. We're enjoying doing these, and they're really well received. So hello at meaningfulmoney.tv with a subject line podcast question and we'll filter them in

0:42.5

somewhere. We will. Remember, as always, the notes of this episode are at meaningfulmoney.com TV

0:50.3

slash QA42. So there's any links and stuff we talk about. They will be there. Meaningfulmoney.tv slash QA42. And if you're watching this on YouTube, then maybe drop us a like and subscribe to the channel. It really helps us out. So thank you for that. Let's get straight into it. I'll go first this week, shall I. Okay, this is from Isabel. Hi, Pete and Roger. Thank you for your amazing podcast. Thank you, Isbell. Thank you.

1:11.6

My question is about budgeting and savings percentages. Should you aim for a percentage of your gross pay or your net pay when it comes to aiming for a savings percentage, e.g. Invest 20% of gross or net. I'm self-employed and work contract to contract. For each contract payment, I have to give

1:28.9

25% to agents and lawyers. Then I get paid the rest and have to put aside some of the money

1:34.4

ready for the tax man. When planning for how much I should save invest from each contract payment,

1:39.9

should I be put in aside, 20% of the original contract amount, which would be prior to the agents taking their cut and prior to the tax man taking his cut.

1:48.4

I feel like there's some women working in the tax office as well.

1:51.3

Taxman or woman.

1:53.0

20% of the amount left after the agents, but prior to the tax man, or 20% after both the agent cut and the taxman cut.

2:01.4

I fear you might be overthinking this, Isabel, but you had quite strong feelings about this,

2:07.0

Roj.

2:07.4

Yeah, no, it's probably late at night when I was looking at this last night.

2:11.2

I think what you're going to do, Isabel, is take yourself back to looking at yourself

2:16.7

like an employee person. at yourself like an employed person

2:17.7

what money has an employed person got to allocate to their savings or investments or their pensions and it's the net amount they receive in their pay packet so after any costs effectively and any tax so you need to be doing the same thing.

2:34.0

Your contract is not the money you received.

2:37.0

That's,

2:37.3

that's this for you're, and any tax. So you need to be doing the same thing. Your contract is not the money you

2:36.7

receive. That's your invoice amount. So your business makes a net profit after paying your

...

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