Pensions & Retirement

Pension vs ISA vs Property — Where to Put Your Money UK

Compare pensions, ISAs, and property as long-term investments in the UK. Tax benefits, returns, risks, accessibility, and which is best for your situation.

Pension information is based on current UK legislation. Pensions are regulated by the FCA and The Pensions Regulator. This is not financial advice — consider consulting an FCA-regulated financial adviser.

Pensions, ISAs, and property are the three main ways people in the UK build long-term wealth. Each has different tax advantages, risks, and accessibility. Here is how they compare.

Quick Comparison

FeaturePensionISABuy-to-Let Property
Tax relief on contributions20–45%NoneNone
Employer contributionsYes (3–10%+)NoNo
Tax on growthTax-freeTax-freeIncome tax on rent, CGT on sale
Tax on withdrawal25% tax-free, rest taxed as incomeCompletely tax-freeIncome tax on rent
Access age55 (57 from 2028)Any timeAny time (but selling takes months)
Annual limit£60,000£20,000No limit
Liquid?No — locked until pension ageYes — withdraw any timeNo — selling takes 3–6+ months
Effort requiredMinimal (auto-enrolled)MinimalHigh (management, maintenance, tenants)
InheritanceTax-free before 75, taxed after 75Tax-free (inherited ISA allowance)Subject to IHT
Protection if provider failsFSCS up to £85,000FSCS up to £85,000None — property risk is yours

Tax Treatment Compared

Contributing / Investing

Tax eventPensionISABuy-to-Let
Income tax relief20–45% on contributionsNoneNone
Employer boost3–10%+ matched contributionsNoneNone
Stamp DutyN/AN/A5% surcharge on purchase
National InsuranceSaved via salary sacrificeNoneNone

Growth

Tax on growthPensionISABuy-to-Let
Capital gainsTax-freeTax-freeCGT at 18% (basic) or 24% (higher) after £3,000 allowance
DividendsTax-freeTax-freeN/A
InterestTax-freeTax-freeN/A
Rental incomeN/AN/ATaxed at your marginal rate (20–45%)

Withdrawing / Selling

Tax on withdrawalPensionISABuy-to-Let
Tax-free element25% lump sum100%None
Income tax75% taxed as incomeNoneRental income taxed; sale triggers CGT
National InsuranceNone on pension incomeNoneNone

Returns Comparison

InvestmentTypical annual returnRisks
Pension (global equity fund)6–8% long-term averageMarket volatility, fund charges
Stocks & Shares ISA (global equity)6–8% long-term averageMarket volatility, fund charges
Cash ISA4–5% (2026 rates)Inflation erosion over time
Buy-to-let gross rental yield4–7% (varies by region)Void periods, bad tenants, maintenance, interest rate changes
Buy-to-let capital growth3–5% long-term average (varies hugely)Concentrated risk, illiquid

£10,000 Invested — 20-Year Projection

ScenarioAssumed annual returnValue after 20 years
Pension (with 20% tax relief = £12,500 invested)6%£40,100
Pension (with 40% tax relief = £16,667 invested)6%£53,450
Pension (with employer match = £20,000 invested)6%£64,140
Stocks & Shares ISA (£10,000 invested)6%£32,070
Cash ISA at 3% real3%£18,060
Buy-to-let (highly variable)5% net + rental incomeVaries hugely

The pension wins mainly because of tax relief and employer contributions — not because the underlying investments are different.

When Each Is Best

Pension Is Best When

SituationWhy
Your employer matches contributionsFree money — always take the full match
You are a higher or additional rate taxpayer40–45% tax relief is extremely valuable
You do not need the money before 55 (57 from 2028)Pension lock-up is not a problem
You want to reduce your taxable incomePension contributions reduce income for tax purposes
You want IHT efficiencyPensions are usually outside your estate

ISA Is Best When

SituationWhy
You may need access before pension ageISAs are fully flexible
You have already maxed employer pension matchISA adds tax-free growth with no access restrictions
You are saving for a medium-term goalHouse deposit (Lifetime ISA), career break, early retirement bridge
You are a basic rate taxpayer with no employer matchISA and pension tax relief are more similar
You want completely tax-free withdrawalsNo income tax on ISA withdrawals ever

Property Is Best When

SituationWhy
You have already maxed pension and ISAAdditional investment vehicle
You have significant capital for a depositLeverage can amplify returns (and losses)
You want tangible asset diversificationDifferent risk profile to stocks and bonds
You are prepared to be a landlordActive management required
You are in a high-growth areaCapital appreciation can be significant

The Ideal Strategy for Most People

PriorityActionWhy
1Contribute enough to get the full employer pension matchInstant 100%+ return
2Build an emergency fund (3 months expenses in easy-access savings)Financial safety net
3Pay off high-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans)Guaranteed “return” at the interest rate
4Max ISA allowance (£20,000/year)Tax-free, flexible, accessible
5Increase pension contributions beyond employer matchTax relief is powerful, especially for higher rate taxpayers
6Consider property/other investmentsOnce pension + ISA allowances are being used

Property-Specific Costs to Consider

CostAmount
Stamp Duty Land Tax (additional property surcharge)5% surcharge on top of normal rates
Mortgage interestNow a 20% tax credit only (not deductible for higher rate taxpayers)
Management fees (if using an agent)8–15% of rental income
Maintenance and repairsBudget 10–15% of rental income
Void periods (empty property)Average 2–4 weeks per year
Landlord insurance£150–£400/year
Energy Performance Certificate£60–£120 every 10 years
Gas safety certificate£60–£90/year
Electrical safety check£100–£300 every 5 years
Legal and accountancy fees£500–£1,500/year

True Rental Yield Example

ItemMonthly
Gross rent£1,000
Mortgage interest-£400
Management fee (10%)-£100
Insurance-£25
Maintenance reserve (10%)-£100
Void period allowance (1 month/12)-£83
Net monthly income£292
Income tax on profit (20%)-£58
After-tax monthly income£234

That is £234/month from a property that required a £50,000+ deposit — a 5.6% gross yield but under 3% net after all costs and tax.

Pension and ISA Combined — Couple’s Strategy

AllowancePer personPer couple
Pension annual allowance£60,000£120,000
ISA annual allowance£20,000£40,000
Total tax-advantaged saving£80,000£160,000

Most people do not max both, but understanding the combined allowance shows the power of using these before looking at property.

Related guides:

Sources

  1. HMRC — Tax relief on pensions