What I get from my AVC account

The value of your Additional Voluntary Contributions (AVCs) account will depend on:

  • the amount of AVCs you have paid in
  • the investment returns
  • the length of time your AVCs have been invested.

At retirement, your AVC account can be taken as extra lump sum or used to buy pension benefits.

Currently AVCs can be taken as part of the maximum tax-free lump sum of up to 25% of the available Lifetime Allowance , even if you started paying AVCs after 8 April 1987.

Alternatively, AVCs can be used to buy extra pension, either from BA Pensions or you can use the Open Market Option to buy an annuity from an insurance company of your choice. Details will be provided at retirement on request.

AVC annuities bought from APS before 6 April 2015 will continue to be classed as money purchase benefits (and would therefore be paid out as one of the first priorities in the event that the Scheme ever terminates or winds up). Annuities purchased after 5 April 2015 are classed as non-money purchase benefits and if APS was to ever wind up with insufficient funds to pay all of the promised benefits in full this may result in annuities bought from APS after 5 April 2015 not being fully protected once in payment. The exact impact would depend on the funding position in the Scheme at the time it wound up. You can read more about this in the ‘Important change to legislation affecting AVCs’ article on the ‘News’ page.

You can choose to leave your AVCs in the Scheme when you draw your main Scheme pension. When you then eventually decide to draw your AVC benefits you can receive 25% of your AVC account as a tax-free lump sum, subject to HMRC limits.

AVC forms can be found in the Forms section.

New PensionWise guidance regulations from 1 June 2022

New regulations have come into force which are intended to increase the take-up of free pensions guidance from PensionWise, in order to help you make informed decisions about your options when accessing your pension if you have AVCs. If you have AVCs, when you apply to draw or transfer out your pension, we will direct you to appropriate pensions guidance available through PensionWise.

When you apply to draw your pension benefits, we will:

  1. Offer to book a PensionWise appointment for you; and
  2. Provide you with details to allow you to book an appointment yourself.

We will ask you to complete a form to confirm that:

  1. You have received PensionWise guidance; or
  2. The guidance does not apply to you (for example, because you have received regulated retirement advice within the previous 12 months); or
  3. You wish to opt out of receiving PensionWise guidance.

We have published our PensionWise Guidance pack on the Forms page of our website. The pack includes details about PensionWise and a form to fill in when you draw your pension benefits.

 

    Flexible access to pensions from April 2015

    You now have greater flexibility over how you access any defined contribution (DC) pension savings from age 55. AVCs in the Scheme are DC benefits, but you will have to transfer any AVCs out of the BA Scheme to one or more different pension arrangements if you want to access them under the Government's flexible access rules. You can transfer all or part of your AVC account (and you can also choose to transfer your main Scheme pension). Before transferring benefits out of the Scheme you should get free guidance from PensionWise to make sure any new arrangements meet your needs and that you fully understand how this will affect any tax you have to pay.

You can get full details about transferring AVCs or your main Scheme pension out of the BA Scheme from the AVC-only transfer out pack.

 
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