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Get up to 125,000 Virgin Points by transferring a pension to Virgin Money

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Virgin Money has launched an offer for anyone who is interested in transferring their existing pensions into a Virgin Money pension.

You can earn 125,000 Virgin Points if you transfer a pension worth over £100,000 to Virgin Money by 23rd August. However, you can receive a smaller reward by transferring as little as £1,000.

Existing Virgin Money pension customers can benefit if they transfer another pension which is held elsewhere.

You can find out more and full offer terms on the Virgin Money website here.

Get up to 125,000 Virgin Points by transferring a personal pension to Virgin Money

How does the offer work?

To qualify for this offer, you need to be a member of Virgin Red (which you can join for free if you are not a member) and transfer one or more pension(s) worth at least £1,000 to a Virgin Money pension by 23rd August 2024.

The funds must be kept in the pension until 20th December 2024 to qualify for the Virgin Points.

How many Virgin Points will you earn?

The amount of Virgin Points you will receive depends on the total amount of money transferred into the Virgin Money pension:

Total amount transferred inVirgin Points reward
£1,000 – £9,99910,000
£10,000 – £24,99920,000
£25,000 – £49,99945,000
£50,000 – £99,999100,000
£100,000+125,000

You can only earn Virgin Points on the transfer of an existing pension and not on any additional investment you make yourself.

What can you do with 125,000 Virgin Points?

Virgin Red offers you a genuinely broad range of ways to spend your Virgin Points reward.

What can you say about a list of rewards that ranges from a Greggs sausage roll for 200 Virgin Points, to a stay at Sir Richard Branson’s brand-new luxury hotel in Mallorca for those with a six-figure balance?

And, of course, you have flight rewards. This article shows you how many Virgin Points you need for reward flights on Virgin Atlantic, Air France, KLM, Delta and other SkyTeam airlines. 125,000 Virgin Points would be more than enough for return flights for one person to New York JFK (peak or off-peak), Barbados (off peak), The Maldives (off peak) or Shanghai (off peak) to pick just a few examples. Terms apply. Taxes, fees and carrier-imposed surcharges apply to reward flights and charges must be paid in cash.

How is your money managed?

Virgin Money’s pension has been designed with simplicity in mind and offers two choices for customers to choose from, Navigator and Self Drive. Both pension options are managed by a dedicated team of investment experts.

  • Navigator – is a hands-off way to manage your pension. Virgin Money automatically adjusts your investments as you age, moving towards more stable and lower risk investments as retirement approaches.
  • Self-Drive – is for customers who want to steer their own route to retirement. It consists of four different investment approaches to suit different risk appetites: Careful Defensive, Cautious Growth, Balanced Growth and Adventurous Growth

The options are explained through a series of guides and videos on the Virgin Money website here, as well as two easy Navigator or Self Drive calculators.

With Virgin Money’s Online Service and dedicated app, you can keep track of your pension wherever you want to, as well as top up at any time.

What fees will you pay?

You pay up to 0.75% of your pension pot in total each year, based on the value of the account.

This is made up of two clear and simple charges – an Account Charge of 0.30% for managing the account and an Annual Management Charge of up to 0.45% for managing the investments.

Remember, the value of investments can go up and down, so you may get back less money than you put in. Tax depends on your individual circumstances and the regulations may change in the future. Currently, with this product, you can only access your pension money as a lump sum from age 55 (57 from 2028). So, if you’re looking for flexible access, this might not be the pension for you.

Where can you find out more?

You can find more information on the Virgin Money pension offer on its website here.

Virgin Money is a trading name of Virgin Money Unit Trust Managers Limited.

Comments (44)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Neovyl says:

    I checked with VM and this is not a SIPP. I wonder whether those who still work will be caught by 40+% tax if they decide to transfer money from VM to SIPP in the future, if they are still putting money in their pensions and have no tax free allowance…

  • christian kemp says:

    Sorry, could you explain what you mean by that?

  • Neovyl says:

    This are just my thoughts and assumptions so I may be wrong, would be interesting to hear from those who have knowledge of tax systems. You can put maximum £60,000 per year into SIPP. If you tranfer let’s say £100,000 pension to Virgin Money and later decide to transfer away from them into SIPP, you will transfer 60,000 for free but 40,000 will be above your allowance so you’ll pay tax on this.

  • christian kemp says:

    Hmm I would be really suprised if that were the case, but I am concerned enough to double check! I assumed the £60k allowance was for personal pensions, not just SIPPs. And also that once money is in a pension wrapper, its in there, and you can transfer it around other pension wrappers, with zero tax implications.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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