We’d like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum.
This is to keep it a safe and useful space for MoneySaving discussions. Threads that are – or become – political in nature may be removed in line with the Forum’s rules. Thank you for your understanding.
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!
Should I fix or not?
Dave05
Posts: 35 Forumite
Hi
My ISA has now come out of its 1yr fixed term which was at 1.40% and I know we can't predict accurately what the interest rate will do but looking for some suggestions please or what others have done
1.Do I fix my isa again and how long have others/do people recommend
2. Do i just opt for a easy access isa sitting around 1.45% and move it here and there with the interest rates?
Thanks in advance:-)
My ISA has now come out of its 1yr fixed term which was at 1.40% and I know we can't predict accurately what the interest rate will do but looking for some suggestions please or what others have done
1.Do I fix my isa again and how long have others/do people recommend
2. Do i just opt for a easy access isa sitting around 1.45% and move it here and there with the interest rates?
Thanks in advance:-)
0
Comments
-
Why use a cash ISA at all?
If you don't have enough money in savings to use up your personal savings allowance then you'll be able to earn more interest in non-ISA accounts, such as current accounts and regular savers.
If you do have enough money in savings to use up your personal savings allowance then chances are you don't need all of it to be in cash form and it would make sense to consider investing some of the pot....0 -
You need ISAs if you plan to be wealthy. If the annual interest you receive on your savings ever exceeds £1000 then having those savings in an ISA (or several ISAs) offers a significant benefit. You cannot invest a large sum of money (e.g. £80,000) all at once so you need to plan ahead. How far ahead you start investing in ISAs depends on how wealthy you plan to become.
Assuming you don't envisage needing the money in your ISA at short notice then a fixed-term ISA is the right answer if you think interest rates will remain at their current level or fall. But the wrong answer if you think interest rates will rise during whatever term you are contemplating.Reed0 -
Just to be clear, in the 'exceeding PSA' scenario I was advocating considering investing rather than saving (for at least some of the pot) but doing so via S&S ISAs, not by taking the funds out of the ISA shelter.Reed_Richards wrote: »You need ISAs if you plan to be wealthy. If the annual interest you receive on your savings ever exceeds £1000 then having those savings in an ISA (or several ISAs) offers a significant benefit. You cannot invest a large sum of money (e.g. £80,000) all at once so you need to plan ahead. How far ahead you start investing in ISAs depends on how wealthy you plan to become.
However, if OP's pot is well below £80K then it may be less important to preserve ISA status if that can relatively easily be reinstated later on (after achieving short term gains) - the traditional benefits of ISA status have been weakened considerably in recent years by a combination of higher annual allowance, introduction of PSA and poor cash ISA rates.
Perhaps OP will return and give some more info about size of pot(s), objectives, other assets, etc....0 -
Hi guys thanks for your replys really appreciated
I go over my PSA due to 40% taxpayer and there savings elsewhere. This ISA is basically to be left for the foreseeable future
Lookng at the fixed isas 1 year 1.65% to 5 years at 2.26% do i fix for 5 with the possible chance of having to withdraw with a penalty of 180 days interest or just fix year by year...decisions ha0 -
Rather than put the whole lot into one long term fixed rate account it could be better to set up a ladder starting with a 1 year account, a 2 year account... and a 5 year account. Each year one account will mature and you put the money in a new 5 year account. In this way you are getting access to some of the money every year should you need it but always receiving the higher interest available from a 5 year term.0
-
Coldlron, thanks for your message, yeah I'm currently on with the pension so I'll see how I get on there mate
Linton, thanks for your message too, so by filtering like this im i right in saying it's allowed to have that many
as your not 'paying in' to new isas just transferring matured ones0 -
Reed_Richards wrote: »You need ISAs if you plan to be wealthy.
If you intend to be wealthy long term then cash ISAs are not the place to be. I agree ISAs are worthwhile to build wealth but the S&S ISA version not cash.Remember the saying: if it looks too good to be true it almost certainly is.0 -
If you have enough disposable income to put £20,000 per year into an ISA then it would not take too many years to become modestly wealthy, if you don't spend too much of what you have saved. In the long term your savings might well grow faster if invested in a balanced portfolio of shares but it would be prudent to keep some of your savings in cash. And your question was about options for cash ISAs.If you intend to be wealthy long term then cash ISAs are not the place to be. I agree ISAs are worthwhile to build wealth but the S&S ISA version not cash.Reed0 -
Nobody was suggesting otherwise, but we're highlighting that cash ISAs are poor value for money and so cash holdings would typically be expected to earn more interest in taxable accounts (again assuming that uninvested cash is kept below levels where interest would exceed PSA).Reed_Richards wrote: »In the long term your savings might well grow faster if invested in a balanced portfolio of shares but it would be prudent to keep some of your savings in cash.
It was OP (Dave05) who was asking about cash ISAs and others who highlighted that there are potentially better solutions available....Reed_Richards wrote: »And your question was about options for cash ISAs.0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply
Categories
- All Categories
- 352.2K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.6K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 454.3K Spending & Discounts
- 245.2K Work, Benefits & Business
- 600.9K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 177.5K Life & Family
- 259K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.7K Read-Only Boards
