What to know about tax-free savings before the April 5 ISA deadline
- Written by Jonquil Lowe, Senior Lecturer in Economics and Personal Finance, The Open University
The window for making the most of your savings this tax year is closing. As the final day of the 2022-23 tax year, April 5 is your last chance to make full use of this year’s tax allowances.
You can pay as much as £20,000 into a tax-free individual savings account[1] (ISA) before this date. This annual limit has been frozen since 2017 and, unlike some other forms of tax relief, you cannot carry forward any unused ISA allowance.
So, it’s a case of use it or lose it, but why the rush to make the end of tax year deadline?
ISAs were introduced in April 1999. If you’d saved the maximum allowed each year since then you would have paid in over a quarter of a million pounds by now. And when you put your money in an ISA it grows free of income and capital gains tax, and can be withdrawn without any tax charges. If you were to add in the tax-free interest and investment growth you can get with an ISA, maybe you could even have become one of an estimated 1,480 ISA millionaires[2].
If you have missed that chance, there’s no reason why you can’t catch up on some tax-free savings now. And by opening an account before the April 5 deadline, you could still make use of this year’s allowance and then continue contributing afterwards under next year’s. So what do you need to know?
The different types of ISA
There are several types of ISA, and you can choose to pay into just one type each year, or open a mixture and spread your annual allowance among them. The most popular are cash ISAs, where your money goes into a savings account with a bank, building society or the government-backed National Savings & Investments (NS&I[3]).
As the charts below show, in 2020-21 (the most recent tax year for which data is available), cash ISAs accounted for two-thirds of the 12 million ISA accounts people paid into, and half of the value of the money they paid in.
How many ISAs are being used?