Ten top tips on the planned two-pot system for retirement savings

10th August 2022

Ten top tips on the planned two-pot system for retirement savings

Draft amendments have been published to introduce the proposed two-pot system for retirement savings. Here is a summary of the main features.

On 29 July 2022, National Treasury released the 2022 Draft Revenue Laws Amendment Bill for public comment until 29 August 2022 to introduce the “two-pot” system for retirement savings that was flagged in the National Budget.

The two-pot system would allow members of retirement funds to access one-third of their pension savings once a year, in the event of an emergency, while preserving the other two-thirds for retirement. This is regarded as a better alternative to people resigning their jobs to access their pensions or provident funds.

The planned implementation date is 1 March 2023, although Treasury said it was probably optimistic, given the necessary changes to fund rules and systems and education of members.

Below we list the “top ten” aspects of how the two-pot system is envisaged, according to the draft legislation. In practice, members of longer standing in retirement funds will have three pots: the vested pot (amounts accumulated before the implementation date), the savings pot (the one-third that is accessible) and the retirement pot (the two-thirds of contributions after 1 March 2023 that have to be preserved until retirement date).

Written by Joon Chong, Partner from Webber Wentzel