Wealth of Advice, Swale House, Mandale Business Park, Durham, DH1 1TH
As the end of the tax year approaches, it’s easy to feel pressured by deadlines and last‑minute financial decisions. But as Matthew and Joe explain in their latest Retire Well episode, year‑end planning isn’t about rushing. It’s about awareness, preparation, and taking small steps that build long‑term financial resilience.
Whether you’re still growing your wealth or already drawing from it in retirement, understanding how allowances work (and how to use them purposefully) can make a meaningful difference over time.
One of the simplest but most overlooked steps is knowing exactly what you’ve earned in the tax year. Many people know what reaches their bank account each month, but fewer can clearly identify:
Checking your government gateway account helps establish this baseline. It also highlights whether you’re approaching key thresholds:
Crossing £100,000 is particularly significant due to the rapid tapering of the personal allowance.
For many people, this is where active planning, especially through pension contributions, can make a major difference.
Pensions remain one of the most tax‑efficient ways to save, reduce taxable income, and prepare for retirement.
Key rules to keep in mind:
“It’s that joined‑up thinking, planning ahead rather than scrambling at the end of March or early April.” — Matthew
This is especially relevant for anyone close to key tax thresholds.
Your ISA allowance is straightforward:
Use up to £20,000 per tax year or lose it.
Cash ISAs and Stocks & Shares ISAs are both eligible, and many providers offer flexible ISAs, allowing you to withdraw money and put it back in the same tax year without affecting your allowance.
This can be particularly useful if:
With dividend and capital gains tax allowances shrinking, ISAs offer increasingly important tax protection.
For those holding investments outside a wrapper, the General Investment Account (GIA) can serve as a flexible short‑to‑medium‑term pot. But with the capital gains tax allowance now just £3,000, managing gains and losses becomes essential.
Remember:
Many investors now use GIAs as “holding accounts” before gradually moving money into ISAs or pensions each year.
If you’re approaching state pension age, topping up missing National Insurance (NI) years can offer excellent long‑term value.
You can:
Doing so can add £342 per year to your future state pension, often paying for itself within three years.
This is especially important as you near retirement and have fewer working years remaining to naturally fill gaps.
Once you begin drawing from pensions, ISAs, and investments, tax planning takes on a different focus. It’s now about using your allowances efficiently and avoiding unnecessary tax.
Key considerations include:
Large withdrawals for home improvements, cars, or travel should ideally be spread across years to avoid being pushed into higher tax bands.
The end of the tax year is a natural time to reassess estate‑related documents and decisions, including:
Inheritance tax (IHT) thresholds have been frozen for years, while property and pension values have risen—pushing more households into the IHT net.
Many people assume estate planning is only for the wealthy, but the freeze on the nil‑rate band and property inflation mean this is no longer true.
Gifting allowances to remember:
These can form part of thoughtful, long‑term estate planning rather than reactive, last‑minute action.
Tax year end isn’t about complicated strategies or frantic decisions. It’s about:
Small, consistent decisions repeated year after year create powerful long‑term results.
If you want a better view of what your future could be, we'll have a chat and work out if we make a good fit for you and your financial picture.

