⚡ Quick Answer
Match the savings account type to when you’ll need the money: easy-access for emergency funds and goals within 12 months; notice accounts for 1-2 year horizons; fixed-rate bonds for money you won’t touch for a defined period. Then consider tax: if your savings interest will exceed your Personal Savings Allowance (£1,000 basic rate, £500 higher rate), use a Cash ISA. Don’t stay loyal to low-paying default bank accounts — the gap between the average easy-access rate (around 2.8%) and the best (around 4.5-5%) is enormous.
The UK savings market currently has over 700 live products. Most people navigate this by either accepting whatever rate their main bank offers (usually uncompetitive) or picking the highest number they see on a comparison site without checking whether that account actually suits their needs. Both approaches cost money.
Here’s the framework that actually works.
Step One: Match Account Type to Timeline
This matters more than the headline rate. The wrong account type — regardless of its rate — can cost you in penalties, or leave emergency funds locked when you need them.
Emergency fund and money needed within 12 months: Easy-Access
Easy-access accounts let you withdraw without notice or penalty. Rates are variable. Current best rates: 4.5-5% AER from challenger banks. Your emergency fund must be here — no exceptions.
Goals 1-3 years away: Notice Account
You earn slightly more than easy-access in exchange for giving notice before withdrawals (typically 30-120 days). Best 90-day notice accounts currently around 4.5-4.7% AER. Good for a house deposit with a flexible timeline or any goal where you could plan a withdrawal weeks in advance.
Specific goal more than 12 months away: Fixed-Rate Bond
Lock money for 1, 2, or 5 years and earn a guaranteed rate. Current best 1-year fixed bonds: around 4.9-5.0% AER. Best 2-year: around 4.7-4.8% AER. Only use this if you genuinely won’t need the money until the term ends — penalties for early access are real.
Long-term savings: Cash ISA or Stocks and Shares ISA
The ISA wrapper makes all interest permanently tax-free. For genuinely long-term savings (5+ years), a stocks and shares ISA may grow faster than cash. For risk-averse savers or those needing certainty, a fixed-rate Cash ISA works well.
Step Two: Consider Your Tax Position
The Personal Savings Allowance means most savers with modest balances pay no tax on interest. But at current rates:
- Basic-rate taxpayers (PSA: £1,000) exceed their allowance with around £22,000 in savings
- Higher-rate taxpayers (PSA: £500) exceed their allowance with around £11,000 in savings
- Additional-rate taxpayers (no PSA) owe tax on every penny of interest
Once you approach these thresholds, shift savings into a Cash ISA to protect interest from tax. The ISA wrapper is permanent — money sheltered now stays tax-free even as balances grow significantly over years.
Step Three: Compare Rates — And Keep Comparing
Savings rates change frequently. A rate that was competitive six months ago might now be trailing the market by 1.5%. The difference on a £25,000 balance between 3% and 4.5% is £375 per year. The difference between 1.5% and 4.5% is £750 per year — for doing nothing but switching accounts.
Set a reminder every six months to check your savings rates. Most easy-access account switches can be completed in 20-30 minutes online. For Cash ISAs, use the official transfer process (not withdrawal and redeposit).
What Not to Do
- Don’t keep savings in your current account — current accounts pay little or no interest
- Don’t mistake a high introductory bonus for a genuinely good ongoing rate — check the base rate separately
- Don’t put all savings in a fixed account “for the rate” without keeping an accessible emergency fund
- Don’t assume your main bank offers competitive rates — they almost never do
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I open an ISA or standard savings account first?
For most people building savings: use your Personal Savings Allowance with a competitive easy-access account first. Once approaching the PSA threshold, open a Cash ISA. The ISA’s permanent tax protection justifies prioritising it once you’re near the threshold.
Can I hold savings accounts at multiple banks?
Yes — there’s no limit. Many savers hold an easy-access account for the emergency fund and a fixed bond for medium-term savings simultaneously. Just check FSCS protection if any individual institution holds more than £120,000 of your money.
What does AER mean?
Annual Equivalent Rate — the standardised way to express an interest rate that accounts for compounding frequency. Always compare accounts using AER, not gross or monthly rates.
For a regularly-updated rate comparison, MoneyfactsCompare updates every working day.
