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.
Finding the best savings rate can add hundreds of pounds to your savings each year. Here’s how to choose and where to find the top rates.
Best Savings Accounts at a Glance
Account Type
Typical Top Rates
Best For
Easy-access
4.5-5.0% AER
Emergency fund, flexibility
Notice accounts
4.6-5.1% AER
Higher rate, some flexibility
1-year fixed
4.5-5.0% AER
Defined savings goal
2-year fixed
4.3-4.8% AER
Locking in rate longer
Regular saver
5-7% AER
Building savings habit
Rates as of March 2026. Rates change frequently — always check current offers.
Easy-Access Savings Accounts
Best for: Emergency funds, short-term savings, flexibility
What to Look For
Why It Matters
No withdrawal limits
Access your money anytime
No notice period
Instant access when needed
Competitive rate
Don’t accept low rates
FSCS protected
Up to £85,000 protected
How to Choose
If You Want
Choose
Absolute highest rate
May need to switch more often
Stable good rate
Established banks, less rate chasing
App-based management
Online/challenger banks
Branch access
High street banks (usually lower rates)
Interest Calculator: Easy-Access
Savings Amount
At 4.5% AER
At 4.0% AER
Difference
£5,000
£225
£200
£25
£10,000
£450
£400
£50
£20,000
£900
£800
£100
£50,000
£2,250
£2,000
£250
Notice Accounts
Best for: Savers who can plan ahead, slightly higher rates
Notice Period
Trade-off
30 days
Small rate boost, minor inconvenience
60 days
Better rates, need to plan withdrawals
90 days
Often best rates for flexible savings
120+ days
Highest rates but less practical
When Notice Accounts Work
Situation
Suitable?
Emergency fund only
No — need instant access
Emergency fund + extra savings
Yes — keep emergency in easy-access, rest in notice
Saving for known future expense
Yes — give notice before you need the money
Bulk savings you won’t touch
Yes — get the rate boost
Fixed-Rate Savings Accounts
Best for: Money you definitely won’t need for 1-5 years
Term
Typical Rate
Considerations
6 months
4.3-4.7%
Short commitment, decent rate
1 year
4.5-5.0%
Sweet spot for many
2 years
4.3-4.8%
Lock in rate longer
3 years
4.2-4.6%
Good if rates might fall
5 years
4.0-4.5%
Long commitment, rate certainty
Fixed vs Easy-Access Decision
Choose Fixed If
Choose Easy-Access If
Money is for a specific future date
Might need the money
Want guaranteed rate
Interest rates might rise
Don’t need to access it
Building emergency fund
Comfortable locking away
Uncertain about future needs
Breaking a Fixed-Rate Account
Scenario
Typical Penalty
Early withdrawal (if allowed)
60-180 days interest loss
Not allowed
Money is locked, no access
Always check early access terms before opening.
Regular Saver Accounts
Best for: Building a savings habit, highest headline rates
Feature
Typical Terms
Rate
5-7% AER (sounds great!)
Maximum monthly deposit
£100-500
Minimum monthly deposit
£25-50
Term
Usually 12 months
Withdrawals
Often limited or none
The Catch: Average Balance
Monthly Deposit
Total After 12 Months
Interest at 6%
£100
£1,200
~£39 (not £72)
£250
£3,000
~£98 (not £180)
£500
£6,000
~£195 (not £360)
Interest is calculated on average balance, not final balance.
Regular savers are good for discipline, but the actual pounds earned aren’t as high as the rate suggests.
Cash ISAs
Best for: Higher earners, maximising tax-free allowances
ISA Type
Access
Typical Rate
Easy-access Cash ISA
Instant
4.0-4.8%
Fixed-rate Cash ISA
End of term
4.3-5.0%
Do You Need a Cash ISA?
Your Situation
Need ISA?
Basic rate taxpayer, under £20k savings
Probably not (PSA covers you)
Higher rate taxpayer
Consider it (only £500 PSA)
Additional rate taxpayer
Yes (no PSA)
Building substantial savings for future
Yes (future-proofs tax position)
Personal Savings Allowance covers £1,000 (basic) or £500 (higher) of interest tax-free.
How to Compare Accounts
Key Factors
Factor
What to Check
AER
Annual Equivalent Rate — includes compounding
Gross rate
Rate before compounding — less useful for comparison
Bonus rate
Is the rate boosted temporarily?
Minimum balance
Can you meet it?
Maximum balance
Any cap on deposits?
Access
Instant, notice, or fixed?
Withdrawal limits
Any restrictions?
FSCS protection
Is it covered up to £85,000?
Watch Out For
Red Flag
Why It Matters
Introductory bonus
Rate drops after 12 months
Limited withdrawals
May not suit your needs
Non-UK bank
Check FSCS status
Minimum balance to earn interest
Could earn nothing
Savings Strategy
Tiered Approach
Pot
Amount
Account Type
Purpose
Emergency fund
3-6 months expenses
Easy-access
Immediate needs
Short-term savings
Varies
Notice (90 days)
Known future expenses
Medium-term
Varies
1-2 year fixed
Goals 1-3 years away
Long-term
Varies
Consider investing
Goals 5+ years away
Switching and Chasing Rates
Rate Chasing: Worth It?
Savings
Extra 0.5% Rate
Annual Gain
Worth the Effort?
£5,000
0.5%
£25
Maybe not
£10,000
0.5%
£50
Borderline
£20,000
0.5%
£100
Probably yes
£50,000
0.5%
£250
Definitely yes
When to Switch
Situation
Action
Rate dropped significantly
Look for better alternative
Introductory period ending
Move before rate drops
Fixed term ending
Compare new options
Much better rate available
Calculate if worth switching
Key Takeaways
Shop around — rates vary significantly
Match account to purpose — emergency fund needs easy-access
Check for catches — bonus rates, limits, fees
FSCS protection — keep within £85,000 per institution