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The Top Easy Access Savings Discussion Area
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Malchester said:patpalloon said:Anyone with experience of Oxbury? They do an EA at 4.8 but was thinking of the 95 day notice account. But has pretty bad reviews especially of the app2
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The big advantage of ISAs that I can see , outside of tax implications, is that locking my money away in higher interest fixed ISAs for 1, 2, 3, 5 years doesn't mean it's completely locked and I could withdraw (with a penalty) if I need to - unlike with similar interest bonds, which I won't even consider as the idea of no access whatsoever to my money is a nonstarter.
But this is getting off topic!3 -
patpalloon said:Anyone with experience of Oxbury? They do an EA at 4.8 but was thinking of the 95 day notice account. But has pretty bad reviews especially of the appI've been with them for 9 months and I like them - first with a notice account and in the last few months with EA too.If you need to chat with an agent 9-5 weekdays, i've found them to be very helpful... as others have said, deposits are quick and withdrawals before 1pm weekdays should be same day.... they also will give 14 days notice before dropping the rate.the thing you need to be aware of with Oxbury is that they often, though not always, release new issues when changing rates - sometimes the rate on an existing issue is changed, but if they release a new issue at a higher rate, you might need to contact them to transfer... though to be fair this has applied more to notice accounts (where you open the new issue yourself and email/chat with them requesting to transfer the balance and close the older issue) as their EA account is still on Issue 1 and the rate on that account has increased automatically.I can confirm that the Android app is only for authentication for logging into the site - Apple app would show balances etc but Android App won't... I did try to install it on my iPad, but was a hassle - so I just use the Android app now to login.2
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jpsman said:The big advantage of ISAs that I can see , outside of tax implications, is that locking my money away in higher interest fixed ISAs for 1, 2, 3, 5 years doesn't mean it's completely locked and I could withdraw (with a penalty) if I need to - unlike with similar interest bonds, which I won't even consider as the idea of no access whatsoever to my money is a nonstarter.
But this is getting off topic!0 -
martinm1 said:
But if you've got more than 85k in an EA account I would wonder why not put it into a 120 day as I can't think of a time when I've needed more than 20k in a couple of months.
It wasn't that long because I'd been dragging my heels waiting for it to mature.
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Rheumatoid said:Zopa_Trooper said:If you're paying tax on your savings, ISA's are a no-brainer.2kWp Solar PV - 10*200W Kioto, SMA Sunny Boy 2000HF, SSE facing, some shading in winter, 37° pitch, installed Jun-2011, inverter replaced Sep-2017 AND Feb-2022.1
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km1500 said:jpsman said:The big advantage of ISAs that I can see , outside of tax implications, is that locking my money away in higher interest fixed ISAs for 1, 2, 3, 5 years doesn't mean it's completely locked and I could withdraw (with a penalty) if I need to - unlike with similar interest bonds, which I won't even consider as the idea of no access whatsoever to my money is a nonstarter.
But this is getting off topic!2kWp Solar PV - 10*200W Kioto, SMA Sunny Boy 2000HF, SSE facing, some shading in winter, 37° pitch, installed Jun-2011, inverter replaced Sep-2017 AND Feb-2022.1 -
KevinG said:Rheumatoid said:Zopa_Trooper said:If you're paying tax on your savings, ISA's are a no-brainer.
Or 3% if you're a higher rate taxpayer, or 2% if you fall into the 60% marginal rate which kicks in when your taxable income is between £100k and £125k.
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@soulsaver
Furness Triple Access Saver 5% (£1 min) from 18/8/23. Branch/post/phone only.5 -
km1500 said:jpsman said:The big advantage of ISAs that I can see , outside of tax implications, is that locking my money away in higher interest fixed ISAs for 1, 2, 3, 5 years doesn't mean it's completely locked and I could withdraw (with a penalty) if I need to - unlike with similar interest bonds, which I won't even consider as the idea of no access whatsoever to my money is a nonstarter.
But this is getting off topic!
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