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!

The Old Regular Savers Discussion Thread 28/12/24-29/1/26

18898908928948951113

Comments

  • Kim_13
    Kim_13 Posts: 4,349 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    s71hj said:
    Kim_13 said:
    s71hj said:
    s71hj said:
    My Halifax regular saver has matured today and I've opened another. Given that I fully paid into the matured one already this month am I also able to fund the new one or do I have to wait until next month. 
    There is a quirk with Halifax in that the regular saver rolls over automatically and IIRC transfers the interest to an everyday saver that was also opened alongside the regular saver, so can only ever take one payment a month unless the everyday saver is closed beforehand. That way the maturing regular saver mutates into an everyday saver.

    A brand-new regular saver can then be opened and deposited in the same month (and you'll have a new additional everyday saver created too that you might want to close).
    So I withdrew all the money from the everyday saver and put £250 in the newly opened RS. So in standing order terms can I set up 12 from 1st December or am I limited to 11?
    12, but unless you have also closed the everyday saver the RS autorenews in 12 months and you'd have to wait until December 2026 to pay into that one.

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    I've had a lot of accounts maturing in the last 2 days but from memory, what happened was that the RS turned into an everyday and a "NEW" RS appeared (albeit one that had all last years transactions so I guess NOT actually new) with 0 balance. I put £250 in which was accepted though I might add I hadn't made a November payment into the "old" one. So I guess if I set up 12 payments not 11, come next year's rollover I will have an issue (obviously a very first world problem type of "issue" ! ) of not being able to make a November 2026 payment in? 
    Set up the 12 payments, then close any Everydays you have. Come maturity, with no Everyday to empty the maturing RS into, the RS will become an Everyday and then you are free to open a new RS (which has a new account number and will therefore accept £250, even though you will have already paid into the old RS with the different number.)
  • Section62
    Section62 Posts: 11,440 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Fifth Anniversary Name Dropper
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    Only one.  The second one would be a new one opened after the old one matures.

  • Kim_13
    Kim_13 Posts: 4,349 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    You can only have one, but if you close the Everyday Saver and re-open a new RS manually when it matures, the maturing and new RS can both have £250 paid into in the same month. If your Regular Saver is autorenewed, you are limited to £250 between the two.
  • s71hj
    s71hj Posts: 1,187 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    Kim_13 said:
    s71hj said:
    Kim_13 said:
    s71hj said:
    s71hj said:
    My Halifax regular saver has matured today and I've opened another. Given that I fully paid into the matured one already this month am I also able to fund the new one or do I have to wait until next month. 
    There is a quirk with Halifax in that the regular saver rolls over automatically and IIRC transfers the interest to an everyday saver that was also opened alongside the regular saver, so can only ever take one payment a month unless the everyday saver is closed beforehand. That way the maturing regular saver mutates into an everyday saver.

    A brand-new regular saver can then be opened and deposited in the same month (and you'll have a new additional everyday saver created too that you might want to close).
    So I withdrew all the money from the everyday saver and put £250 in the newly opened RS. So in standing order terms can I set up 12 from 1st December or am I limited to 11?
    12, but unless you have also closed the everyday saver the RS autorenews in 12 months and you'd have to wait until December 2026 to pay into that one.

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    I've had a lot of accounts maturing in the last 2 days but from memory, what happened was that the RS turned into an everyday and a "NEW" RS appeared (albeit one that had all last years transactions so I guess NOT actually new) with 0 balance. I put £250 in which was accepted though I might add I hadn't made a November payment into the "old" one. So I guess if I set up 12 payments not 11, come next year's rollover I will have an issue (obviously a very first world problem type of "issue" ! ) of not being able to make a November 2026 payment in? 
    Set up the 12 payments, then close any Everydays you have. Come maturity, with no Everyday to empty the maturing RS into, the RS will become an Everyday and then you are free to open a new RS (which has a new account number and will therefore accept £250, even though you will have already paid into the old RS with the different number.)
    Thank you. I think in fact that was probably inherent in your original answer but I was a bit slow  on the uptake and didn't  explain my situation fully so as is almost invariably so on this forum I find myself appreciating people's patience! 
  • janusd
    janusd Posts: 1,360 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    Kim_13 said:
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    You can only have one, but if you close the Everyday Saver and re-open a new RS manually when it matures, the maturing and new RS can both have £250 paid into in the same month. If your Regular Saver is autorenewed, you are limited to £250 between the two.
    while the Halifax RS is being discussed, my first RS with them matures on the 1st December (£3k balance). I received a letter from them asking what I want to do with the Everyday Saver (which obviously also expires on 1st December) - renew for 12 months, move (£0 balance so irrelevant) or close... if I do nothing, it converts to an Instant Saver on the 2nd.
    I get that the RS auto-renews, but what do I do about this Everyday account? should I close it now or let the RS balance transfer to it at maturity? The Halifax RS page says to keep it open... any guidance would be appreciated.
  • Kim_13
    Kim_13 Posts: 4,349 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    janusd said:
    Kim_13 said:
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    You can only have one, but if you close the Everyday Saver and re-open a new RS manually when it matures, the maturing and new RS can both have £250 paid into in the same month. If your Regular Saver is autorenewed, you are limited to £250 between the two.
    while the Halifax RS is being discussed, my first RS with them matures on the 1st December (£3k balance). I received a letter from them asking what I want to do with the Everyday Saver (which obviously also expires on 1st December) - renew for 12 months, move (£0 balance so irrelevant) or close... if I do nothing, it converts to an Instant Saver on the 2nd.
    I get that the RS auto-renews, but what do I do about this Everyday account? should I close it now or let the RS balance transfer to it at maturity? The Halifax RS page says to keep it open... any guidance would be appreciated.
    For a maturity on 1st December it'll make no difference, as it's impossible to get a 13th payment in anyway. Unless of course you wish to move the date on until later in December, in which case you would need to close the Everyday so that the RS would become an Everyday on maturity and you would be free to open the new RS at a time of your choosing.

    Should the rate drop between now and then and you no longer wish to renew, you'd also close the Everyday, as this stops the autorenewal. 
  • allegro120
    allegro120 Posts: 2,631 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Third Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited 12 November 2025 at 5:53PM
    janusd said:
    Kim_13 said:
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    You can only have one, but if you close the Everyday Saver and re-open a new RS manually when it matures, the maturing and new RS can both have £250 paid into in the same month. If your Regular Saver is autorenewed, you are limited to £250 between the two.
    while the Halifax RS is being discussed, my first RS with them matures on the 1st December (£3k balance). I received a letter from them asking what I want to do with the Everyday Saver (which obviously also expires on 1st December) - renew for 12 months, move (£0 balance so irrelevant) or close... if I do nothing, it converts to an Instant Saver on the 2nd.
    I get that the RS auto-renews, but what do I do about this Everyday account? should I close it now or let the RS balance transfer to it at maturity? The Halifax RS page says to keep it open... any guidance would be appreciated.
    I don’t close instant saver, just withdraw the balance. Can't see any point in complicating things. 
  • Kim_13
    Kim_13 Posts: 4,349 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    janusd said:
    Kim_13 said:
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    You can only have one, but if you close the Everyday Saver and re-open a new RS manually when it matures, the maturing and new RS can both have £250 paid into in the same month. If your Regular Saver is autorenewed, you are limited to £250 between the two.
    while the Halifax RS is being discussed, my first RS with them matures on the 1st December (£3k balance). I received a letter from them asking what I want to do with the Everyday Saver (which obviously also expires on 1st December) - renew for 12 months, move (£0 balance so irrelevant) or close... if I do nothing, it converts to an Instant Saver on the 2nd.
    I get that the RS auto-renews, but what do I do about this Everyday account? should I close it now or let the RS balance transfer to it at maturity? The Halifax RS page says to keep it open... any guidance would be appreciated.
    I don’t close instant saver, just withdraw the balance. Cant see any point in complicating things. 
    If the rate changes and you no longer want to renew, then doing nothing would complicate things (because the autorenewal will go ahead and you would have to use a workaround in order to be able to open another RS; get it wrong and you will be blocked from opening another until the 12 month anniversary of the autorenewed account.) 
  • janusd
    janusd Posts: 1,360 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    Kim_13 said:
    janusd said:
    Kim_13 said:
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    You can only have one, but if you close the Everyday Saver and re-open a new RS manually when it matures, the maturing and new RS can both have £250 paid into in the same month. If your Regular Saver is autorenewed, you are limited to £250 between the two.
    while the Halifax RS is being discussed, my first RS with them matures on the 1st December (£3k balance). I received a letter from them asking what I want to do with the Everyday Saver (which obviously also expires on 1st December) - renew for 12 months, move (£0 balance so irrelevant) or close... if I do nothing, it converts to an Instant Saver on the 2nd.
    I get that the RS auto-renews, but what do I do about this Everyday account? should I close it now or let the RS balance transfer to it at maturity? The Halifax RS page says to keep it open... any guidance would be appreciated.
    For a maturity on 1st December it'll make no difference, as it's impossible to get a 13th payment in anyway. Unless of course you wish to move the date on until later in December, in which case you would need to close the Everyday so that the RS would become an Everyday on maturity and you would be free to open the new RS at a time of your choosing.

    Should the rate drop between now and then and you no longer wish to renew, you'd also close the Everyday, as this stops the autorenewal. 
    thanks for the replies - wasn't thinking of a 13th payment, more in a general sense - i'll follow @allegro120 suggestion, do nothing and let everything take it's natural course.
  • allegro120
    allegro120 Posts: 2,631 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Third Anniversary Name Dropper
    Kim_13 said:
    janusd said:
    Kim_13 said:
    Chaykin said:
    Kim_13 said:

    If you manually open a new RS, you can pay into the old one and the new one in the same month, as the new account number means they are considered different accounts.
    Halifax - I thought you can only have one Regular Saver with them? Or is this something they don't enforce and, in actual fact, you can open more than one?
    You can only have one, but if you close the Everyday Saver and re-open a new RS manually when it matures, the maturing and new RS can both have £250 paid into in the same month. If your Regular Saver is autorenewed, you are limited to £250 between the two.
    while the Halifax RS is being discussed, my first RS with them matures on the 1st December (£3k balance). I received a letter from them asking what I want to do with the Everyday Saver (which obviously also expires on 1st December) - renew for 12 months, move (£0 balance so irrelevant) or close... if I do nothing, it converts to an Instant Saver on the 2nd.
    I get that the RS auto-renews, but what do I do about this Everyday account? should I close it now or let the RS balance transfer to it at maturity? The Halifax RS page says to keep it open... any guidance would be appreciated.
    I don’t close instant saver, just withdraw the balance. Cant see any point in complicating things. 
    If the rate changes and you no longer want to renew, then doing nothing would complicate things (because the autorenewal will go ahead and you would have to use a workaround in order to be able to open another RS; get it wrong and you will be blocked from opening another until the 12 month anniversary of the autorenewed account.) 
    Unlike Lloyds and BoS, Halifax doesn't restrict you from closing and opening at any time you want.  Or has this changed?  Several years ago I had a break from Halifax RS because the rate was too low, it was very simple - I just closed the account.
This discussion has been closed.
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 355K Banking & Borrowing
  • 254.6K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 455.7K Spending & Discounts
  • 247.8K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 604.9K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 178.7K Life & Family
  • 262.5K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
  • 37.7K Read-Only Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.