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Auto enrolment penalties surge

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1st Feb 2016
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The number of businesses fined for not complying with auto enrolment pension rules surged between October and the end of December last year.

The Pensions Regulator (TPR) said that it made 1,021 £400 fixed-penalty notices between 1 October and 31 December on employers that did not automatically put workers into a pension scheme.

In the previous quarter it made 107 fixed-penalty notices.

TPR said that the sharp rise in fines was because the pension rules applied to more employers, in particular smaller employers which are more likely to “leave things until the last minute”.

There was also a big increase in the number of compliance notices sent to employers for not complying with pension rules, warning them that they may be fined.

Half of the 4,818 compliance notices sent so far were sent between October and December, the regulator said.

Around 12,000 small and micro employers became subject to the new legal duties last summer. The majority have put eligible staff into a pension without the regulator having to use its powers although, as expected, a number needed the “additional nudge” of enforcement action, TPR said.

“The latest figures highlight the ongoing success of auto enrolment,” said Ros Altmann, minister for pensions. “It is really encouraging to see that so far, the vast majority of small and micro employers have set up a workplace pension for their staff and are helping them on their way to a more financially secure retirement. From now on, the smallest employers will start to meet their obligations and we must ensure they know what to do and have help if they need it.”

The regulator also said:

  • More than 90% of the first small employers required to put their staff into a workplace pension have complied with the law
  • Since the pension rules started in 2012, 5.8 million people have been automatically enrolled into a workplace pension
  • Employers may fail to complete their declaration of compliance because they wrongly assumed their business adviser was doing this for them. Employers and their advisers should be clear who is completing what automatic enrolment task and advisers should be clear about what services they offer

AccountingWEB launched the No-one gets left behind campaign to alert as many accountants as possible to the obligations implied by auto enrolment. Read our simple eight-point statement which sets out the auto enrolment facts you need to know.

Replies (2)

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By SteveHa
02nd Feb 2016 08:48

Cash cow

As always, another cash cow at the expense of small and micro employers who have neither the expertise, time, resources or funds for yet another government mandated obligation that will ultimately benefit no-one.

If an employee wants a pension, they have always had the ability to go out and get one, without it being forced upon them. Now the penalties for those same micro employers without the cash are hitting.

At some point, these government initiatives are going to price employers out.

Thanks (2)
the sea otter
By memyself-eye
02nd Feb 2016 14:06

and a nightmnare

to administer. I'm still trying after 4 weeks to successfully download a file to People's Pension for a grand total of 6 eligible employees with a total of £32 of employee and employer contributions per week. QuickBooks corrupts the data when saved as an excel file which is then rejected by people's pension system. How micro businesses will do this is beyond me. The fines will only multiply.

RTI is a doddle compared to this nonsense.

Thanks (1)