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I prefer monthly over annual for taxable interest because at the moment I have a not to exceed target of £1000 taxable interest per tax year. This is partly because it is the maximum I can get without paying tax, and partly because having a target makes it easier to budget how much income to salary sacrifice to ensure that my overall taxable income remains in the 20% tax band. Having monthly interest on accounts that have rapidly changing rates and balances makes the target easier to track.
Any excess savings goes in an ISA at BR - 0.9%. That pays annually, but that doesn't matter1 -
NameWithheld said:I prefer monthly over annual for taxable interest because at the moment I have a not to exceed target of £1000 taxable interest per tax year. This is partly because it is the maximum I can get without paying tax, and partly because having a target makes it easier to budget how much income to salary sacrifice to ensure that my overall taxable income remains in the 20% tax band. Having monthly interest on accounts that have rapidly changing rates and balances makes the target easier to track.
Any excess savings goes in an ISA at BR - 0.9%. That pays annually, but that doesn't matter0 -
BestSeagull said:NameWithheld said:I prefer monthly over annual for taxable interest because at the moment I have a not to exceed target of £1000 taxable interest per tax year. This is partly because it is the maximum I can get without paying tax, and partly because having a target makes it easier to budget how much income to salary sacrifice to ensure that my overall taxable income remains in the 20% tax band. Having monthly interest on accounts that have rapidly changing rates and balances makes the target easier to track.
Any excess savings goes in an ISA at BR - 0.9%. That pays annually, but that doesn't matter1 -
NameWithheld said:BestSeagull said:NameWithheld said:I prefer monthly over annual for taxable interest because at the moment I have a not to exceed target of £1000 taxable interest per tax year. This is partly because it is the maximum I can get without paying tax, and partly because having a target makes it easier to budget how much income to salary sacrifice to ensure that my overall taxable income remains in the 20% tax band. Having monthly interest on accounts that have rapidly changing rates and balances makes the target easier to track.
Any excess savings goes in an ISA at BR - 0.9%. That pays annually, but that doesn't matter0 -
KevinG said:Opened a Tandem account for my wife yesterday to max out the interest. It didn't quite go according to plan as the app wouldn't link her account to our joint bank account (the one I used successfully) as it wasn't in her name (which it is, she just isn't the first named). Bit of a pain so we linked it to her Halifax personal account instead and had to shift money to that first. But like someone else earlier, it wouldn't allow a transfer of a large amount using open banking, we managed £50 but not £10,000. Halifax's daily transfer limit is £25,000 and the error message it gave was extremely unhelpful. Anyway, in the end we just moved the money successfully using faster payment but it's still a nuisance only being able to do £25K per day. It is also annoying that some banks, including Tandem, only accept faster payments from the linked account as that would have been a way round the open banking problem.0
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Barkin said:Dale_UK said:
The way to do is to log in and check the rate on whatever issue EA account you have. If it isn't the latest rate, send them a secure message to get your issue number changed.1 -
KevinG said:Opened a Tandem account for my wife yesterday to max out the interest. It didn't quite go according to plan as the app wouldn't link her account to our joint bank account (the one I used successfully) as it wasn't in her name (which it is, she just isn't the first named). Bit of a pain so we linked it to her Halifax personal account instead and had to shift money to that first. But like someone else earlier, it wouldn't allow a transfer of a large amount using open banking, we managed £50 but not £10,000. Halifax's daily transfer limit is £25,000 and the error message it gave was extremely unhelpful. Anyway, in the end we just moved the money successfully using faster payment but it's still a nuisance only being able to do £25K per day. It is also annoying that some banks, including Tandem, only accept faster payments from the linked account as that would have been a way round the open banking problem.2
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BestSeagull said:Barkin said:Dale_UK said:
The way to do is to log in and check the rate on whatever issue EA account you have. If it isn't the latest rate, send them a secure message to get your issue number changed.
But yes, Shawbrook and others are inconsistent in which approach of the two they decide to select.1 -
Shawbrook have raised their EA rate by a whopping 0.05%.0
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BestSeagull said:Barkin said:Dale_UK said:
The way to do is to log in and check the rate on whatever issue EA account you have. If it isn't the latest rate, send them a secure message to get your issue number changed.1
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