Half right:
The Australian pension is determined by TWO tests: Assets and Income.
The outcome is decided by whichever of them gives a claimant the LEAST amount of pension payment.
If you are under the Assets test then any additional income you may earn will not affect your payments.
Under the Income Test your assets are converted to a nominal income figure using Centrelink “Deeming Rates” (which have recently changed). Additional income above “free” thresholds reduces your payments 50% (or 25% per person if in a couple), which when income tax is added to the equation creates effective taxation rates 70-122% (yes, at some points you lose 22 cents more than you actually earn!)
What does happen when you travel overseas is a bit complicated:
Basically nothing, initially, if your journey is six weeks, or less.
Then if gets messy.
You must inform Centrelink if your travel will be longer than six weeks.
They then remove and/or minimise certain of the pensions components - the Energy Supplement goes entirely and the Pension Supplement reduces to the minimum amount.
That situation continues until a pensioner is overseas for 26 weeks, at which point how long a person had been in Australia during their “Working Life” comes into play. Australian Working Life Residency is how many years you were resident in Australia between 16 and your pension qualification age. Thirty-five years is required to retain the full pension (or pension component of age pension payment). Anything less will reduce the amount proportionately (20 years relevant residency will deliver 20/35 of the pension payment). Both Pension Supplement and Energy Supplement are completely removed (roughly $75 a fortnight).
There are a number of countries with reciprocal social security agreements where things can become more complicated. The UK agreement is even more complex because Australia walked away from it about 20 years ago in frustration with the UK refusal to index UK age pensions for Australian residents.
A permanent return to UK can result in certain years in Australia being treated as full years of NI contributions if prior to the relevant date. And therefore fill in NI payment gaps up to the 35 years required for a full UK pension.
Which, of course, would be at the current - triple-lock rate - not the frozen rate.
And, of course, even temporary returns to UK entitle you to uplifting for the time of your visit. You should inform DWP of the dates you will be in UK in advance by letter or phone call. Flight details can be helpful.
I generally ring DWP on my arrival to let them know that I have arrived (I have an old mobile phone with a Tesco GBP10/month prepaid SIM card that I reactivate on arrival (I purchase a new GBP 10 prepayment voucher before I leave so I have one on hand for my next trip before I leave).
The Australian Age Pension payment has three (or four if you rent) components:
Age Pension
Pension Supplement
Energy Supplement
Rent Assistance (Renters only)
I hope this makes the situation a little easier to understand.
Regards
Steve Symmons