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ISA Yearly Interest
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harrpau7
Posts: 128 Forumite
Quick question, is interest on an ISA calculated on your total balance or simply the amount that you put in for each tax year?
Eg: Lets say I opened an ISA in April 2010, and for the tax year ending April 2011 I put £5,000 in, and then for the tax year ending April 2012 I also put £5,000 in, would the yearly interest be for the whole £10,000 or simply for the £5,000 put in for the tax year?
Thanks.
Eg: Lets say I opened an ISA in April 2010, and for the tax year ending April 2011 I put £5,000 in, and then for the tax year ending April 2012 I also put £5,000 in, would the yearly interest be for the whole £10,000 or simply for the £5,000 put in for the tax year?
Thanks.
0
Comments
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It's the total balance for the number of days it's in there.0
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Quick question, is interest on an ISA calculated on your total balance or simply the amount that you put in for each tax year?
Eg: Lets say I opened an ISA in April 2010, and for the tax year ending April 2011 I put £5,000 in, and then for the tax year ending April 2012 I also put £5,000 in, would the yearly interest be for the whole £10,000 or simply for the £5,000 put in for the tax year?
Thanks.
Just to elaborate slightly, you would get interest on 5000 for year 10/11, and interest on both lots of 5000 in year two (with interest also being calculated on the interest you gained from year 1).
E.g.
At 4% interest:
10/11
start of year 5000
end of year 5200
11/12
start of year 10200 (5000+5200)
end of year 106080 -
It all depends when you put the money in.
If you paid £5K in on April 6 2011, and kept the money untouched, you will have got a full year's interest on April 5 2012.
If you then paid in another £5K on April 6 2012 (making your balance £10K), and keep the money untouched, you will get a full year's interest on £10K on 5/4/2013.
DreamerV's numbers are correct if you get 4% interest in both years, for full balances deposited on the first day of each tax year.
If you deposit in smaller amounts throughout the year, your interest will be pro-rata-ed for the number of days you had money in the account.
Worth checking, though, whether the interest rate is guaranteed for more than 12 months from the start - many have a bonus for 12 months. Or if the rate lasts longer, you might not be allowed to top up after your initial deposit.0
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