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The Top Easy Access Savings Discussion Area
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uptdale said:When you go over £85k it looks like you will be protected by the temporary high balances rule if you are buying your main residence.
I'm not sure you're right about that. I think it deals with SELLING a home. The difference is that with selling, a large amount of money suddenly lands in your account.0 -
gwapenut said:uptdale said:When you go over £85k it looks like you will be protected by the temporary high balances rule if you are buying your main residence.
I'm not sure you're right about that. I think it deals with SELLING a home. The difference is that with selling, a large amount of money suddenly lands in your account.
Having said that, my interpretation is that if you are pooling money from several sources into one bank account, in preparation for using it to buy a house, that would be covered under the temporary high balance scheme:FCSC website said:[there must be] sufficient connection between the relevant life event and the sums in the depositor’s account, [e.g.] Real estate transactions (property purchase…)1 -
wiseonesomeofthetime said:@Zerforax
I would spread between at least two accounts of similar status just in case one of the banks systems are down when you need access to some.
At least that is how my savings are set up.k_man said:It's not a lot of admin to keep savings in 2 banks!
Regarding getting the money our via faster payments, I strongly advise you do this a couple of weeks before you need the money.
Large faster payments often trigger fraud/money laundering checks, which can delay the payment for quite a whileOh there are more accounts..Savings account for child #1Savings account for child #2Current account for both of me&partnerChase spending account for bothA joint savings accountA previous joint spending accountAnd that is without counting the 5+ savings accounts we'd used recently.I hadn't had any problems with transfers so far but in that case I may do some more today and tomorrow. Just hard to judge when is good to transfer out since exchange/completion can always be delayed quite a lot!uptdale said:When you go over £85k it looks like you will be protected by the temporary high balances rule if you are buying your main residence.
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gwapenut said:uptdale said:When you go over £85k it looks like you will be protected by the temporary high balances rule if you are buying your main residence.
I'm not sure you're right about that. I think it deals with SELLING a home. The difference is that with selling, a large amount of money suddenly lands in your account.The link does say:Real estate transactions (property purchase, sale proceeds, equity release - relating to your main residence only. This does not have to be a UK property but must relate to your main residence).
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No further questions, your honour. I was wrong!1
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Deleted_User said:soulsaver said:Family BS 1.5% Exclusive Easy Access Savings Account | Family Building Society
Confusingly this mentions a 'cut off' for deposits (16 Aug IIRC), and can't put back any previous w/ds after that date?
What's that about if it's easy access?I've held earlier versions of Family BS's Premium Saver, and it does mean strictly no further deposits after the cut-off date.It's easy to take money out, not to deposit itYou can even use this kind of account in tandem with the type of account that allows a limited number of withdrawals per year (e.g. Nationwide BS 1 Year Triple Access Online Saver). Further deposits go to the account that allows more deposits. Most withdrawals come from the account that doesn't limit the number of withdrawals (but you could take everything out of the account that limits withdrawals if necessary, provided that you keep at least 1 free withdrawal unused).
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For Al Rayan instant access savings accounts, does anyone know how long it takes for deposits via FP bank transfer to show in the account on the app? I sent payment just before midnight on Fri and was showing this morning but then sent a large amount at lunchtime and no sign of it as yet.0
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Not used them but their rate is 1.6% which beats Chase0
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I'm using chase and zopa at the moment. Chase 1% cashback is excellent as are the zopa boosted pots. Especially when zopa increase rates without you having to give notice on them.
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Newcastle BS have launched a triple access saver (and an ISA version) pays 1.50%, but goes down to 0.75% if you make more than 3 withdrawals per year.Don’t think there is postcode restrictions with this like some of there other accounts.3
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