Savings & Investing

Lifetime ISA (LISA) Guide UK — Free 25% Bonus for Your Home or Retirement

Everything you need to know about the Lifetime ISA. Get a 25% government bonus (up to £1,000/year) towards your first home or retirement. Eligibility, rules, and tips.

Savings and investment information is for educational purposes only. The value of investments can go down as well as up. Cash savings up to £85,000 per person per institution are protected by the FSCS.

The Lifetime ISA is one of the best financial products available in the UK — a guaranteed 25% instant return on your savings, courtesy of the government. Whether you’re saving for your first home or building a retirement nest egg, the LISA offers a bonus that no savings account or investment can match. Despite this, many eligible people still don’t have one.

How the Lifetime ISA Works

The concept is simple:

  1. Save up to £4,000 per year into your LISA
  2. The government adds a 25% bonus — up to £1,000 per year, completely free
  3. Use it for your first home (property up to £450,000) or retirement (from age 60)

Over a full savings lifetime — opening at 18 and contributing until 50 — you could receive up to £32,000 in government bonuses alone, before any interest or investment growth.

Key Rules and Eligibility

Before opening a LISA, you need to know the rules:

  • Age: You must be aged 18–39 to open a LISA. Once open, you can continue contributing until you turn 50.
  • Annual limit: Maximum £4,000 per year. This counts towards your overall £20,000 annual ISA allowance.
  • Bonus timing: The 25% bonus is paid monthly, typically within 4–9 weeks of each contribution.
  • 12-month rule: Your LISA must be open for at least 12 months before you can use it to buy a home. Open one as soon as possible, even with just £1.
  • Two types available:
    • Cash LISA — earns interest like a savings account. Best for short-term goals.
    • Stocks & Shares LISA — your money is invested in funds. Better for longer time horizons (5+ years).

Using a LISA for Your First Home

The LISA is hugely popular with first-time buyers. Here’s how it works for property purchases:

  • The property must cost £450,000 or less (a figure that hasn’t risen since 2017, despite significant house price inflation — widely criticised)
  • The home must be purchased with a mortgage, not bought outright with cash
  • You must be a first-time buyer — you must never have owned a property anywhere in the world
  • Funds are transferred directly to your solicitor or conveyancer on completion — not at exchange. Plan accordingly, as you cannot use LISA money for your exchange deposit
  • You can combine a LISA with other ISA savings, shared ownership schemes, and the government’s other first-time buyer support

Important: If you previously opened a Help to Buy ISA, you can hold both — but you can only use one government bonus per property purchase, not both. The LISA bonus is almost always the better choice if you’ve been contributing the maximum.

Using a LISA for Retirement

If you don’t buy a home with your LISA (or want to keep saving after purchasing), it becomes a powerful retirement tool:

  • Withdraw tax-free from age 60 — unlike a pension, where only 25% is tax-free and the rest is taxed as income
  • A solid complement to your workplace pension, not a replacement for it
  • Maximum lifetime bonus: If opened at 18 and contributed to until 50, that’s 32 years × £1,000 = £32,000 in free government money

With a Stocks & Shares LISA invested over decades, the combination of the 25% bonus and compound growth can be remarkably powerful.

The Withdrawal Penalty — Worse Than You Think

If you withdraw money for any reason other than buying your first home (under £450,000) or after age 60, you’ll face a 25% withdrawal penalty. This is harsher than it first appears:

Amount
Your contribution£4,000
Government bonus (25%)£1,000
Total in LISA£5,000
Early withdrawal penalty (25% of total)−£1,250
Amount you receive£3,750
Loss from your own money£250 (6.25%)

You don’t just lose the bonus — you lose £250 of your own savings. The penalty was temporarily reduced to 20% during COVID (making it neutral), but this was not extended. Think carefully before locking money into a LISA if you might need it for other purposes.

LISA vs Pension: Which Is Better?

This is one of the most common questions. Here’s how they compare:

FeatureLifetime ISAPension
Tax relief / bonus25%20–45% (depending on tax rate)
Employer contributionsNoYes (often matched)
NI savings (salary sacrifice)NoYes
Access age6055 (rising to 57 from 2028)
Tax on withdrawalTax-free25% tax-free lump sum; rest taxed as income
Annual cap£4,000£60,000
FlexibilityCan use for first homeRetirement only

For most people, the right approach is: maximise your employer’s pension match first (it’s free money), then use a LISA for additional savings. Basic-rate taxpayers get an identical 25% boost from both, but the pension comes with employer contributions and NI savings that the LISA can’t match. Higher-rate taxpayers benefit even more from pensions due to 40% tax relief.

That said, the LISA’s tax-free withdrawals at 60 are a genuine advantage over pensions, where income is taxed. A combination of both gives you the most flexibility in retirement.

Which Type of LISA Should You Choose?

The right choice depends on your timeline:

  • Cash LISA — Best if you’re planning to buy within 1–3 years. Your money earns interest and isn’t exposed to market fluctuations. You’ll know exactly how much you have when you need it.
  • Stocks & Shares LISA — Best if you’re 5+ years away from using the money (whether for a home or retirement). Historically, investments outperform cash over longer periods, giving your savings more room to grow — though values can fall as well as rise.

Several providers offer both types. Compare interest rates (for Cash LISAs) and fund options and fees (for Stocks & Shares LISAs) before committing.

Tips to Maximise Your LISA

  • Open a LISA now, even with just £1. This starts the 12-month clock immediately. If you decide to buy a home in the future, you won’t be caught out by the waiting period.
  • Contribute before 5 April each year to ensure you claim the full £1,000 bonus for that tax year. Don’t leave free money on the table.
  • Set up a direct debit for £333.33/month to spread contributions evenly and hit the £4,000 annual limit without a lump sum.
  • Review your LISA type if your plans change — you can transfer between Cash and Stocks & Shares LISAs without penalty.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Lifetime ISA