Q - Each partner has a pension but in retirement it only takes income from one. Is there a reason?
A - The software does not automatically split pension income. If all of your clients' expenses are co-owned, which for couples' expenses are set as such by default, the software will simply start withdrawing from one pension followed by the next when it comes time to use pension income to fulfill expenses, normally after retirement.
This will be the case provided you leave pensions set to crystallise on an as needed basis. The software's default for pension plans is to crystallise via UFPLS.
Option 1 - Consider splitting the ownership of some expenses
If the objective is to show a more even split when fulfilling expenses between pension funds, you may consider splitting some of the expenses. For example, you could have the couples' shared fixed costs (e.g., their home mortgage) co-owned, and their personal expenses and goals owned individually.
For example, John's personal expenses, owned solely by John.
And Julia's personal expenses are owned only by Julia.
For individual expenses, the software will attempt to draw first from assets owned by the owner of the expense, which respective of the liquidation order and crystallisation the individual's pension.
Viewing the chart details for a year following their retirement with joint goals/expenses:
The Expenses tab of the Year View will show how her personal costs are being fulfilled, respective of any incomes received at the time and the software's Plan Settings – Setting the Liquidation Order – Have a question? (planwithvoyant.com), as set in Preferences.
When the expenses/goals have been split you can see the same expense fulfillment details by looking in the Expenses Tab:
And both pensions being liquidated:
Tip: Having at least some of the expenses owned individually has the added advantage of showing decreases in certain costs following the death of a spouse or partner. When running the software's Life Insurance Need Analyser or when modelling an earlier than expected mortality in a what-if scenario, the software will know to drop any expenses out of the plan upon the death of its owner. Co-owned expenses, on the other hand, will continue in the plan.
Option 2 - Set a planned withdrawal from at least one pension
Apart from this, you could set an income from each of the pensions by going to the Planned Withdrawals screen and set a planned withdrawal of a fixed amount or an inflated one or as a percentage of the pension's balance. This amount might be for half the expenses or might match the individual's personal allowance or even be a grossed up amount to account for both the personal allowance and the 25% of the crystallised funds that would be tax free if coming from an uncrystallised pension.
If pensions have already been crystallised, ensure the withdrawal is set up from the drawdown pot rather than the uncrystallised pot.
Article created - 2018-June-12