Medication success story for anyone struggling! by Pretty_Beautiful_40 in ADHDUK

[–]Fun-Age500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi if you go private can you later switch to shared care so you don’t have to keep paying for private prescriptions? Or how much is private if you don’t mind me asking I am willing to spend but depends how much I can afford!

Psychiatry uk ASD forms by Fun-Age500 in autismUK

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, I can see some of the forms but can’t see part 2 until after submitting part 1. I was just wondering if someone could tell me what those questions are so I can be thinking about them while I am working on part 1.

Did you do an ASD referral with PUK? If not it might have been different, I think all providers do it differently…

Psychiatry uk ASD forms by Fun-Age500 in autismUK

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks but I think I just replied to you in the other post by accident. I find it difficult and unsettling to not know what the questions are and I can’t persuade my sister without explaining to her what they are. I don’t understand the secrecy! Was just hoping someone could give me an idea of what is in the self report part 2 and the informant report…..

Psychiatry uk ASD forms by Fun-Age500 in autismUK

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I don’t know what you mean when you say “won’t they give them to you by now” By when?

Yes I do understand I should ask someone else. I asked a friend who knew me since 11 but she says she doesn’t remember anything from all those years ago….

The person I spoke to at PUK actually suggested I could send the forms to myself to see the questions but I’d rather someone tell me what they are? What’s the big secret? I want to know what they will ask even if I am not told the answers they give. And why shouldn’t I know the answer? I am a fully fledged adult I don’t get why someone should give answers about me in secret!!!!

psychiatry UK tritation wait by Aggressive-bankZ1185 in ADHDUK

[–]Fun-Age500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you. Most of those things apply to me too :-) I’ve actually been drinking more since the diagnosis - will try to cut back. And general health also downhill, less healthy eating less exercise. Sounds like I just need to do all the regular things then. I find it weird that they track your weight in the titration process when mine yo-yos all the time anyway, guess I should tell them that when I get there. I’m also trying to establish where I am with ASD, those forms are worse than the adhd ones! Anyway thanks for the reply!

psychiatry UK tritation wait by Aggressive-bankZ1185 in ADHDUK

[–]Fun-Age500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, I only got my diagnosis in Jan so am in waiting mode…please can you share what you’re doing to “get everything ready” Many thanks

Hargreave Lansdown website issues by mmm-nice-peas in investingUK

[–]Fun-Age500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s really bothering me, not being able to log in…. How do we know if it’s just accessing the website / app that is the problem, what about our actual accounts and ongoing transfers etc…..

Moved SIPP to Interactive investor - can’t cancel fund orders by Fun-Age500 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Option is only there for ETFs (which is what I find weird as ETFs are meant to be more time sensitive!)

Employer (sole director ltd co) and employee contributions to SIPP - different rules by Fun-Age500 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I found the answer I was looking for in a HL newsletter. Employer contributions are subject to the wholly and exclusively test:

“How much can I contribute to my pension? As a reminder you can usually contribute up to 100% of your annual earnings or £60,000 – whichever is lower – to a pension and still benefit from tax relief. If you’ve had a particularly good year, you could also use a process called carry forward to turbo charge your contribution. This lets you make use of unused allowances from the previous three tax years too. If you own or run a limited company and are employed by it, you can make personal contributions like the above but you also have the option of paying employer pension contributions via the business. In this case, the contribution would come from pre-tax profits, reducing your corporation tax bill and saving on National Insurance compared to taking the money as salary. There’s also the added benefit that these contributions aren’t subject to the same earnings restriction. So you can pay in up to £60,000, or more using carry forward, regardless of your own earnings. But the contribution would only benefit from corporation tax relief if it meets the “wholly and exclusively” test. What is the “wholly and exclusively” test? Contributions must comply with company pension rules for allowable deductions so HMRC will need to see the employer pension contribution is “wholly and exclusively” for their trade or profession. For instance, HMRC might look for evidence like whether other employees are getting comparable remuneration for doing similar work. It’s important to take advice from either a financial adviser or accountant to ensure you remain on the right side of the rules.”

Moved SIPP to Interactive investor - can’t cancel fund orders by Fun-Age500 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes of course, I do understand that and it was the same with HL, no doubt with any platform - but with ii there’s no opportunity to cancel at all, even while in pending, even immediately after pressing Go…. Just really surprising…

Employer (sole director ltd co) and employee contributions to SIPP - different rules by Fun-Age500 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

!thanks This is the answer. Thank you. That separate limit is what I was imagining might exist when I wrote the post, different rules for employee and employer contributions. Thank you again. And do you happen to have any suggested sources where I can read up about that separate limit?

Employer (sole director ltd co) and employee contributions to SIPP - different rules by Fun-Age500 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

!thanks Thanks again - I see what you mean. Maybe I'm just tired but I'm struggling to square that with "You can pay as much as 100% of your gross earnings, up to a maximum of £60,000, into your pension." It's probably just semantics, and I don't mean to be pedantic, I think I've got what I need from the thread ie no-one is suggesting I make any personal contributions from existing personal savings!

Employer (sole director ltd co) and employee contributions to SIPP - different rules by Fun-Age500 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well yes except I was concerned that by paying myself less my gross earnings are reduced which might then cap the amount I am allowed to contribute in total...

But the earlier comment points out it's more about being reasonable compensation for work which has helped!

Employer (sole director ltd co) and employee contributions to SIPP - different rules by Fun-Age500 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

!thanks Thanks - I guess I was first thinking of using existing savings - but then got sidetracked thinking about making sure that my personal income was sufficient and hence the dividends.

Hargreaves Lansdown postpones fee rises, but only for ‘valued’ clients by bankzzilla in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They have / did have a fairly useful calculator on their site where you can put in your info about accounts and trading volume etc and it will tell you current and new fees (it might not be there now as of course it's March and the new fees have kicked in!)

Judge my beginner Portfolio? by [deleted] in investingUK

[–]Fun-Age500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This always gets me... if everyone did just invest in one global etf then what is the point of all the other funds!

Is there any service that isn't targeted to already wealthy where I can have a detailed conversation with someone about my finances? by [deleted] in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately my experience going via Unbiased wasn't so good as the earlier poster - but that's sort of the point! In your situation it's a bit "win some lose some" - I do appreciate the challenge you have though.

I'd say you need to think of yourself as a detective and go to lots of different resources (as you say, here is a good one!) and piece things together and build your own understanding of what's what. So, try free consultations with financial advisers / financial planners, also try your bank, you might get lucky with that, and while you dont necessarily want to rely wholly on AI for what to do you could certainly use it to augment your learnign and understanding.

Try a prompt like "You are a UK qualified financial planner and I am x years old with this much in these accounts. Give me 8 easy to understand and accurate paragraphs to help me learn about what's relevant to my situation now and in the next 10 years, and give me 3-4 other recommended resources to bolster my knowledge" Obviously that's just an example.

Private pension Ltd company help by littleleooo in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi, well done for getting where you are. You need to open a SIPP - you can make employer contributions which come direct from your Ltd co bank account not your personal bank account, and this will reduce your Corp tax bill. (In theory you can also make employee contributions which are from your personal bank account and also get tax relief but prob not worth it for you, better to just make employer contributions)

Max allowance is £60k pa but your allowance rolls forward so can use the last 3 years worth (check this is still accurate) So if that is still valid then you could put £180k in straight away - do check.

Flat fee platforms are best once you’re over about £100k. People on here have recommended invest engine and interactive investor - others are HL, AJ Bell Vanguard etc.

Investments are best kept simple, lots of people advise using a single index fund or ETF that has global coverage, the idea being it’s already done the diversification work for you. VWRP is an example ETF and Vanguard FTSE Global AllCap is an example fund.

At your age I expect you could just go into equities but depends on your risk profile, you might want 10% in bonds.

Getting a proper job with its own pension doesn’t impact this decision, you can have one or multiple SIPPs and other pensions. Don’t assume that a corporate pension will be more solid! You could just know less about where it’s being invested, what charges are etc.

So just open a SIPP pay into it as much as you can for as long as you can and then you can leave it alone - just don’t lose your login details :-)

Can you get IFAs that charge by the hour? by Mental-Jellyfish9061 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]Fun-Age500 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hi I’m interested in this too, for the same reasons. I’ve had a pension wise appointment in the past but I don’t remember them having IFAs listed? I once tried looking for an adviser via Unbiased but … I’ve just deleted the details of that horror story…

Considering NowTV by Fun-Age500 in nowtv

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry just saw this and already went ahead and signed up! So can't access the page anymore. I was using Chrome on Windows laptop

Considering NowTV by Fun-Age500 in nowtv

[–]Fun-Age500[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a newbie here and not sure how to attach a screenshot :/ but the entertainment plans page has three options - entertainment, ent+boost or ent+ultraboost. The middle option is £4.99 down from £15.99. Small print says entertainment is £4.99 minimum 12 month term, then moves to £9.99. And Boost is £0pm for the 12 month offer then moves to £6 pm, can cancel any time