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Transfer balance cap – capped defined benefit income streams

How the transfer balance cap rules apply to capped defined benefit income streams.

Last updated 3 December 2024

Modified transfer balance cap rules

A capped defined benefit income stream, such as a lifetime pension, counts towards your transfer balance.

However, the transfer balance cap rules apply differently to capped defined benefit income streams as any excess transfer balance is generally unable to be commuted from these income streams.

If you have a capped defined benefit income stream:

  • it will be included in your transfer balance account and
    • count towards your personal transfer balance cap
    • taken into account when we calculate if you're entitled to indexation of your personal transfer balance cap
  • your super fund will calculate the 'special value' your capped defined benefit income stream according to a legal formula and report it to us, with the amount then recorded as a credit in your transfer balance account
  • you may need to include income from these income streams in your assessable income and have a reduced entitlement to the super income stream tax offset if both
    • your income from your capped defined benefit income streams exceeds the defined benefit income cap
    • you're 60 years old or older – or under 60 years old (and receiving a death benefit income stream from a person who died at 60 years old or older).

If you exceed your personal transfer balance cap due to a combination of capped defined benefit income streams and account-based income streams:

  • tax consequences may apply to the income from your capped defined benefit income streams
  • you may need to commute your account-based pension and be liable for excess transfer balance tax.

Capped defined benefit income streams

Capped defined benefit income streams include:

  • lifetime pensions, regardless of when they start
  • lifetime annuities that existed before 1 July 2017
  • life expectancy pensions and annuities that existed before 1 July 2017
  • market-linked pensions and annuities that existed before 1 July 2017.

If you're receiving an income stream, ask your super fund if it's a capped defined benefit income stream.

Calculating the 'special value'

Your super fund will calculate the 'special value' of your capped defined benefit income stream and report it to us. You will receive a credit in your transfer balance account for this amount.

The following steps shows how they will calculate it.

Step 1 – annualise your entitlement

Annualise the first payment you are entitled to receive from the income stream after the income stream started (or after 1 July 2017 if income stream existed before 1 July 2017).

This can be expressed in the following formula:

First payment divided by the number of days in the period, multiplied by 365.

Example: annualise your entitlement formula

Jane retired and started a lifetime pension on 1 May 2016.

To work out the annual entitlement of her pension, Jane's superannuation fund needs to 'annualise' her first fortnightly payment after 1 July 2017, which is $5,753.42. To do this, they first calculate the daily rate by dividing her gross fortnightly payment by 14. They then multiply this amount by 365 days:

$5,753.42 ÷ 14 × 365 = $150,000.

End of example

Step 2 – calculate your special value

For lifetime pension or annuity, your special value is your annual entitlement multiplied by 16.

For non-commutable life expectancy or market-linked products, your special value is your annual entitlement multiplied by the number of years (rounded up to the nearest whole number) remaining in that product.

Example: calculate your special value formula

Malcolm retired on 1 January 2017. His superannuation fund needs to calculate the special value of his market-linked pension.

The special value of his market-linked pension at 1 July 2017 is his annual entitlement for 2017–18 multiplied by the remaining term. The pension's remaining term of 18 years and one month is rounded up to the nearest whole year, 19.

To calculate the annual entitlement of his pension, Malcolm's superannuation fund needs to 'annualise' his first weekly payment after 1 July 2017, which is $575.35. This is calculated by working out the daily rate by dividing the gross weekly payment by seven and multiplying this amount by 365 days.

$575.35 ÷ 7 × 365 = $30,000

The special value of his pension is 19 × $30,000 = $570,000.

End of example

If your special value exceeds your personal transfer balance cap

If you only have credits in your transfer balance account from capped defined benefit income streams, you won't have an excess transfer balance.

However, you may need to include part of the excess amount in your assessable income if both:

  • you have credits in your transfer balance account from both a capped defined benefit income stream and an account-based income stream
  • the annual income you receive from your capped defined benefit income streams exceeds your defined benefit income cap.

Your entitlement to the tax offset may also be affected.

For more information, see Capped defined benefit and account-based income streams.

Assessable income from your capped defined benefit income streams

If you are 60 years old or over (or a death benefit dependant and the deceased died at 60 years old or over) and your capped defined benefit income exceeds your defined benefit income cap, you may have additional tax liabilities.

This depends on which of the following components are paid to you as part of your total annual capped defined benefit income stream:

Taxable component - taxed element and tax-free components

If your defined benefit income is comprised of a taxed element, a tax-free component, or both - 50% of your defined benefit income (excluding any amounts from an untaxed element) that exceeds your defined benefit income cap is included in your assessable income.

Taxable component - untaxed element

If your defined benefit income is comprised of an untaxed element, this entire amount is included in your assessable income. However, the 10% tax offset you would normally be entitled to will be reduced if the total amount of your defined benefit income (including any amounts of taxed element and tax-free components) exceeds your defined benefit income cap. The tax offset entitlement is reduced by 10% of the excess (but can't be reduced below zero). In other words, the 10% offset applicable to the untaxed element-sourced income only applies to the amount of the untaxed element-sourced income up to your defined benefit income cap, and no tax offset applies to the excess.

Multiple components

Both of these treatments apply if your defined benefit income includes an untaxed element as well as a taxed element, a tax-free component, or both, and the total amount of defined benefit income exceeds your defined benefit income cap.

Note your taxed element sourced income is counted first (‘stacked’) before your untaxed element sourced income when calculating your entitlement to tax offsets.

If you have an untaxed element in your income stream, your fund may not pre-populate your payment summary with your entitlement to the tax offset as they don't know if you have income from other capped defined benefit income streams that will affect your entitlement to the offset. You will need to determine your entitlement to the offset when preparing your income tax return.

Capped defined benefit and account-based income streams

If you receive both a capped defined benefit income stream and an account-based income stream, you will need to compare the balance of your transfer balance account (taking into account credits and debits from all your income streams) to both your:

  • personal transfer balance cap
  • capped defined benefit balance.

Your capped defined benefit balance is the net sum of all the transfer balance credits and debits in your transfer balance account from capped defined benefit income streams.

If the balance of your transfer balance account exceeds your transfer balance cap, and also exceeds your capped defined benefit balance, you will have an excess transfer balance. Your excess transfer balance amount will include notional excess transfer balance earnings.

You will need to commute your account-based income streams to resolve the excess amount. You will also be liable for excess transfer balance tax.

Income tax consequences may also apply to the income you received from your capped defined benefit income streams.

Example: capped defined benefit in excess of your transfer balance cap

June is 65 years old and was receiving both:

  • a capped defined benefit income stream (estimated special value of $2 million)
  • an account-based income stream (estimated value of $500,000).

Before 1 July 2017, June transferred her account-based income stream back to an accumulation account.

On 1 July 2017, the special value of her capped defined benefit income stream ($2 million) will count towards her personal transfer balance cap of $1,600,000. The balance of her transfer balance account exceeds her personal transfer balance cap by $400,000. However, as this excess is solely from a capped defined benefit income stream, she does not have an excess transfer balance.

As June’s benefits in 2017–18 exceed her defined benefit income cap, she may need to include amounts in her assessable income. Her entitlement to a super income stream offset may also be affected.

June won't be entitled to indexation of her personal transfer balance cap as the highest ever balance of her transfer balance account was more than her cap of $1.6 million.

End of example

 

Example: starting an account-based income stream on top of a capped defined benefit income stream

Greg is receiving a capped defined benefit income stream with a special value of $1.8 million on 1 July 2017. He also has $300,000 in accumulation interests.

Greg’s personal transfer balance cap is $1.6 million. His capped defined benefit balance is $1.8 million.

Greg exceeds his personal transfer balance cap by $200,000 on 1 July 2017. He doesn't exceed his capped defined benefit balance, and doesn't have an excess transfer balance.

After 1 July 2017, Greg starts an account-based income stream using his accumulation interests. The combined total that counts towards his personal transfer balance cap and capped defined benefit balance is $2.1 million ($1.8 million plus $300,000). Greg exceeds his personal transfer balance cap by $500,000, and his capped defined benefit balance by $300,000.

Greg has an excess transfer balance of $300,000 (the lesser of these 2 amounts). He needs to commute the excess from his account-based income stream, along with notional earnings on the excess. He also needs to pay excess transfer balance tax.

Additionally, if Greg’s benefits in 2017–18 exceed his defined benefit income cap, he will need to include amounts in his assessable income from 1 July 2017. His entitlement to the super income stream tax offset may also be affected.

Greg is also not entitled to indexation of his personal transfer balance cap as the highest ever balance of his transfer balance account was more than $1.6 million before 1 July 2021.

End of example

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