I know there are several ladies here around my age. We are the group suddenly deprived of our state pensions and bus passes for several more years, whereas our friends a couple of years older got all that at 60.
We are all very cross, to put it politely. It should have been done gradually, not a sudden jump like that.
For OH and I to go into town together by bus is almost £9 return. Hence we rarely do so!
Oh gets her state pension next January , I get mine in March. We will be almost 66.
I knew I wouldn't get the full pension as rules changed a while ago and you now need a certain number of credit years which I don't have. You get credits for all your Child Benefit years as well as working years, but can't get double credits for the years you worked and claimed child benefit. So many of my working years are not counted. I knew this, I don't like it but we knew.
We have both checked now much pension we will get, and OH won't get full pension either. Despite working her whole adult life, not even any breaks for child rearing. This we now realise is because she chose to retire at 60. At that point we really didn't expect her to be here by pension age, so to waste those last years working was pointless. She had a small works pension and some money from the sale of her parents house, so we knew we could manage. To now discover that she won't get a full pension is galling.
They moved the goalpost at the last minute. She retired at the age she expected to all along.
We don't regret for one minute the decision, it was the right one. What we do regret is OH not continuing to pay her national insurance contributions for the last five years. At no point was she contacted or advised about that possibility. We only have this information now because we have looked it up . The amount to pay now to make it up to full pension is a lot and not worth it for the increase each week.
At least by next spring we will have pensions, so some more money coming in, so for that we are grateful. Not happy bunnies however .
We are all very cross, to put it politely. It should have been done gradually, not a sudden jump like that.
For OH and I to go into town together by bus is almost £9 return. Hence we rarely do so!
Oh gets her state pension next January , I get mine in March. We will be almost 66.
I knew I wouldn't get the full pension as rules changed a while ago and you now need a certain number of credit years which I don't have. You get credits for all your Child Benefit years as well as working years, but can't get double credits for the years you worked and claimed child benefit. So many of my working years are not counted. I knew this, I don't like it but we knew.
We have both checked now much pension we will get, and OH won't get full pension either. Despite working her whole adult life, not even any breaks for child rearing. This we now realise is because she chose to retire at 60. At that point we really didn't expect her to be here by pension age, so to waste those last years working was pointless. She had a small works pension and some money from the sale of her parents house, so we knew we could manage. To now discover that she won't get a full pension is galling.
They moved the goalpost at the last minute. She retired at the age she expected to all along.
We don't regret for one minute the decision, it was the right one. What we do regret is OH not continuing to pay her national insurance contributions for the last five years. At no point was she contacted or advised about that possibility. We only have this information now because we have looked it up . The amount to pay now to make it up to full pension is a lot and not worth it for the increase each week.
At least by next spring we will have pensions, so some more money coming in, so for that we are grateful. Not happy bunnies however .
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