Occupational pension schemes require the establishment of a trust to gain tax advantages and ensure that the scheme’s assets are separate from those of the employer. This factsheet outlines the main responsibilities of occupational pension scheme trustees. If your business is in the Nottingham area, we at AHACCOUNTANTS can provide you with advice on the accounting and audit requirements of your scheme.
Many employers offer their staff the opportunity to save for retirement through an occupational pension scheme. Employees who join the scheme need to have confidence that it is being managed effectively.
The role of pension scheme trustees is vital in ensuring that the scheme is run honestly, efficiently, and in the best interests of the members. Below are the primary responsibilities of occupational pension scheme trustees.
The Pensions Act 1995 brought significant changes to the management of occupational pension schemes, with further amendments made by the Pensions Act 2004. This led to the establishment of The Pensions Regulator (TPR) as the UK regulator for work-based pension schemes.
TPR has several key objectives:
TPR has three core powers:
TPR provides crucial guidance for those involved with pension schemes, including trustees, auditors, and actuaries, available on its website.
Employers can enhance retirement benefits for employees through various schemes, including:
Group personal pension schemes and stakeholder schemes are individual plans in members’ names, where the employer acts merely as an administrator and lacks accounting or audit requirements. In contrast, an occupational pension provides benefits to employees upon retirement or leaving the company and usually involves trustees.
Most company pension schemes in the UK are set up as trusts for two main reasons:
A trustee is a person or company that holds assets for the beneficiaries of the pension scheme, responsible for ensuring proper management and security of members’ benefits.
Trustees must be aware of their legal duties and responsibilities. They are required to have knowledge of pension and trust laws, scheme funding, and investment of scheme assets. They must also familiarize themselves with:
A TPR code of practice outlines compliance requirements, and new trustees must complete training within six months of appointment.
Trustees have critical duties, including:
Key tasks include ensuring:
Trustees have a legal duty to report significant breaches of law to TPR and notify them of particular scheme-related events known as “notifiable events.”
Trustees must make an annual report available within seven months of the scheme year-end, which includes:
Following recent regulations, trustees of some schemes are now required to produce a Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) report, with plans for broader expansion.
Trustees may be personally liable for any losses resulting from breaches of trust, such as:
Trustees may be protected from personal liability for losses caused by a breach, except in cases of actual fraud. Some employers may also provide indemnity insurance for trustees.