Thousands of state pensioners could find themselves caught out by an HMRC income threshold this winter, leaving some worse off than expected.
The tax authority has confirmed that anyone receiving the full new State Pension can earn no more than £22,453 in additional taxable income before exceeding the £35,000 limit.
Crossing that threshold means losing the £200 Winter Fuel Payment, which is automatically reclaimed through the tax system if a pensioner’s total taxable income exceeds £35,000.
This will be the second winter under the new system, which replaced the previous Pension Credit-based eligibility rules after they were scrapped following widespread criticism.
Pensioners receiving the full new State Pension currently get £12,547.60 a year, assuming they have a full National Insurance record.
As this counts towards the £35,000 threshold, they have just £22,452.40 of additional taxable income available before they lose the payment.
Income counted towards the limit includes private and workplace pensions, employment earnings, rental income and savings interest held outside ISAs.
Certain benefits such as PIP, Pension Credit and Disability Living Allowance are excluded from the threshold calculation.
Certain benefits such as PIP, Pension Credit and Disability Living Allowance are excluded from the threshold calculation
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GETTYMoney expert Martin Lewis has highlighted the unforgiving nature of the new system, describing it as an all-or-nothing arrangement with no gradual reduction in payments.
Speaking on the Martin Lewis Podcast, he explained: “This is a cliff edge. If you earn £35,000 and 1p, you lose the entire £200. It is not a graduated scheme, it’s a cliff edge scheme, it’s all or nothing.”
Mr Lewis clarified that the threshold encompasses all earnings subject to income tax, stating: “It is all of your earnings that are subject to Income Tax.
HMRC confirms £200 clawback for state pensioners earning more than £22,453
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GETTY“That is any private pension, any state pension income, any employment income, any savings interest outside of an ISA.”
Pensioners who exceed the £35,000 threshold will have their winter fuel payment automatically recovered by HMRC through the PAYE system or via their Self-Assessment tax return.
No registration or additional action is required from affected pensioners, as the clawback process happens automatically.
Those who wish to avoid receiving the payment altogether can choose to opt out entirely
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GETTYThose who wish to avoid receiving the payment altogether can choose to opt out entirely.
The current threshold represents a significant increase from the previous Pension Credit rules, which stripped the winter fuel payment from pensioners earning approximately £11,600 during 2024 before the system was overhauled.

