Closing an ISA after transfer
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In the times it took to post the questions, you could have filled in the Virgin transfer form. You'd then not have any old account hanging about, and there would be no questions over whether you are breaking any ISA rules.0
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I've had it open for a few years, sometimes using it, sometimes not. If they were to up the interest rate at some point in the future it would still be available.However, let's clarify my question: do HMRC permit you to hold any number of empty ISAs?0
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If you want to transfer, never, ever, ever, withdraw money from a cash ISA!
You'll immediately lose all the lasting tax benefits.Remember the saying: if it looks too good to be true it almost certainly is.0 -
I've had it open for a few years, sometimes using it, sometimes not. If they were to up the interest rate at some point in the future it would still be available.
But you wouldn't be able to use it as you would have subscribed to another ISA, and if you went a full tax year without putting money into it, you would need to fill out a re-activation form to restart using it.0 -
. I'm not using the ISA transfer service (too much messing about).
But posting on an internet forum and debating the Terms and Conditions with a bunch of strangers is less "messing about"?? Really?
Transferring means posting one piece of paper and letting the new ISA provider doing the work. How is that too much hassle?
Doing it your way means losing the allowance for next year. I can't see any circumstances where doing it your way and losing a years ISA allowance is less "messing about" and makes more sense than using the transfer service.0 -
But posting on an internet forum and debating the Terms and Conditions with a bunch of strangers is less "messing about"?? Really?
Transferring means posting one piece of paper and letting the new ISA provider doing the work. How is that too much hassle?
Doing it your way means losing the allowance for next year. I can't see any circumstances where doing it your way and losing a years ISA allowance is less "messing about" and makes more sense than using the transfer service.
Because I don't particularly want next year's allowance. I have just over £15k in the current FD investment. My plan is to keep approximately that amount in an ISA (coincidence that the allowance is around that figure). I just want 1% on 15K, rather than the 0.5% I'm currently getting. Other money is invested elsewhere, including current accounts.
However, all things considered - including the 20th century ISA transfer feature of having to print out a pdf, fill it in manually, and then post it off (!) - I will, nevertheless do this, just to keep all my options open. I suppose the one redeeming feature from my point of view is that my wife's ISA, which we are also transferring to Virgin Money, can be handled in the same way and can go in the same envelope, thus saving one stamp (I assume Virgin will be able to handle two transfer applications in the same envelope, but who knows).
This business of not being able to take all the money out of an ISA - not sure where that comes from, but it is categorically wrong.
Thanks for all the above posts.0 -
But you wouldn't be able to use it as you would have subscribed to another ISA, and if you went a full tax year without putting money into it, you would need to fill out a re-activation form to restart using it.
Would you need to re-activate the ISA before a transfer to another provider, but not add to it this tax year once its there.:T0 -
This business of not being able to take all the money out of an ISA - not sure where that comes from, but it is categorically wrong.0
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YorkshireBoy wrote: »It comes from the FD "Cash ISA KeyFacts and T&Cs" on their website, as I told you last night. Condition 3.2 (at the foot of page 7) in that document differs from that in the T&Cs in your possession, as it later transpired. I'm not sure why though, since they're the most recent, effective 6th April 2016.
I've seen it now. My Google search didn't list that one.0
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