CiceroMan wrote: ↑Fri May 10, 2024 7:01 pm
This is intriguing, because the national pension that I was calculating for 480 months was quite high.....it sounds like voluntary contributions is similar to an annuity...pay a large sum to get a fixed income later. Is it possible to contribute x amount so that the pension payout would be close to that 4000 USD a month that I was initially calculating?
I realize my questions sound like I'm totally oblivious. I appreciate everyone's patience and time spent here to reply. What a great group.
TunaSki wrote: ↑Fri May 10, 2024 12:44 pm
Tkydon wrote: ↑Fri May 10, 2024 7:54 am
If they have not accumulated 480 months by age 60, they can opt to pay Voluntary Contributions up to age 65 to get the accumulated months another 60 months closer to the 480 months.
That’s only for national pension part though. So you can opt to voluntarily pay national pension from age 60 to 65 to get your national pension record as close to 480 months as possible. But in order to pay employee pension insurance you have to be an employee.
I am not sure of the cut off age for employee pension insurance though. I’m inclined to say it’s 65? But I’m not too sure, maybe 70? But I’m going to hope that most people who use this forum don’t plan to be employees into the 65s/70s
No, there is no way you could get US$ 4,000 per month out of Japanese National Basic and Employees' Pensions, even with a full 40 years of contributions.
And if you have only contributed say 120 months by age 65, you would only get a quarter (120/480) of what you would receive if you had contributed for the full 40 years (480 months).
Every year, they send you a postcard detailing your contributions for the year, whether Basic 一般, Employee Kousei 厚年, Government 公年, Private Educator 私学共済年金, any kind of exemption 免状, or Missed Payment, and the projection for how much pension that would you would receive per year in retirement based on the value of your total contributions.
Section 1 shows the total contributions for (1) Basic Pension Contributions during times of unemployment, (2) Employees' Pension - Kosei Nenkin, Public Service Pension, or Private Educators' Pension, and the Total of (1) + (2).
Above that, it shows a projection of the amount of Annual Pension you would receive if you continue the same contributions and take the Pension at age 65, or if you delay taking the pension to age 70 (1.42 times), or age 75 (1.84 times).
You divide that amount shown by 12 for monthly figures (double paid every 2 months).
You can also check the details on NenkinNet
https://www.nenkin.go.jp/index.html
Register:
https://www3.idpass-net.nenkin.go.jp/ne ... 0602SCR.do
Log In:
https://www3.idpass-net.nenkin.go.jp/ne ... 0101SCR.do
If you were a high earner with the absolute maximum Employee Pension contributions,
(currently Y59,475 per month for Gross Income over Y650,000 per month in 2024/5, also matched by your employer)
https://www.nenkin.go.jp/service/kounen ... yogaku.pdf
for about 30 years (three quarters of the 40 years), then you'd likely receive a Monthly pension of about Y140,000 per month, which at the current exchange rate of Y155 is about US$ 900 per month... Even at an exchange rate of Y115 would be about US$ 1,200 per month...
Then, according to the US Japan Tax Treaty, you would only pay tax on that income in the country where you are living (or the country paying in the case of Government Service Pension), and any difference between that Japan Total Tax and the US Total Tax to the IRS after deduction of Foreign Tax Credits to eliminate Double Taxation...