Savings & Investing

ISA Millionaire — How to Build £1 Million Tax-Free Using Your ISA Allowance

Step-by-step guide to becoming an ISA millionaire. See how long it takes, which ISA strategy to use, and real projections at different contribution levels and growth rates.

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 ISA allowance is one of the most generous tax shelters in the world. Used consistently, it can build a seven-figure tax-free pot. Here’s exactly how ISA millionaires do it — and how you can too.

The ISA Millionaire Maths

At the current £20,000 annual allowance, here’s how long it takes to reach £1 million at different growth rates:

Annual contribution Growth rate Years to £1 million Total contributed Growth earned
£20,000 5% 29 years £580,000 £420,000+
£20,000 7% 24 years £480,000 £520,000+
£20,000 9% 21 years £420,000 £580,000+
£10,000 5% 39 years £390,000 £610,000+
£10,000 7% 33 years £330,000 £670,000+
£10,000 9% 28 years £280,000 £720,000+
£5,000 7% 42 years £210,000 £790,000+
£5,000 9% 35 years £175,000 £825,000+

At 7% average returns — roughly the long-term UK stock market average after inflation adjustments — maxing out your ISA every year gets you to £1 million in about 24 years.

The Power of Compound Growth

This is what happens to £20,000 annual contributions at 7% growth:

Year Total contributed ISA value Growth earned
1 £20,000 £21,400 £1,400
5 £100,000 £123,100 £23,100
10 £200,000 £295,600 £95,600
15 £300,000 £528,700 £228,700
20 £400,000 £839,400 £439,400
24 £480,000 £1,045,000 £565,000
30 £600,000 £1,520,000 £920,000

After year 15, your annual growth starts exceeding your annual contribution. By year 20, your ISA earns more each year than you put in. This is compound growth doing the heavy lifting.

Cash ISA vs Stocks and Shares ISA

Factor Cash ISA (4% rate) Stocks and Shares ISA (7% avg.)
£20,000/year for 24 years ~£790,000 ~£1,045,000
£20,000/year to reach £1m ~33 years ~24 years
Risk Zero (FSCS protected to £85,000) Capital at risk — value can fall
Volatility None ±20% swings in any single year
Best for Short to medium term (1-5 years) Long term (10+ years)
After inflation (2.5%) Real return ~1.5% Real return ~4.5%

For ISA millionaire status, a stocks and shares ISA is essential. Cash ISAs are valuable for short-term savings but won’t generate the growth needed over 20-30 years.

What to Invest In

ISA millionaires typically use simple, low-cost index funds:

Investment approach Typical annual cost Expected long-term return Complexity
Global index fund (e.g., FTSE Global All Cap) 0.1–0.2% 7–9% Very low
UK + global fund split 0.1–0.3% 6–8% Low
Target-date retirement fund 0.2–0.5% 6–8% Very low
DIY stock picking Varies Unpredictable High
Actively managed funds 0.5–1.5% Often lower than index after fees Medium

Low fees matter enormously over long periods:

Fee Impact on £1m pot over 30 years
0.15% Costs ~£65,000 in total fees
0.5% Costs ~£195,000 in total fees
1.0% Costs ~£365,000 in total fees
1.5% Costs ~£510,000 in total fees

A 1% difference in fees costs you over £300,000 on a £1 million ISA. Choose platforms and funds with the lowest total charges.

Tax Savings of an ISA Millionaire

Here’s what you save compared to holding the same investments in a general account:

Tax type General account ISA Annual saving on £1m pot
Dividend tax 8.75/33.75/39.35% (above £1,000 allowance) 0% £1,500–£5,000+
Capital gains tax 18/24% (above £3,000 allowance) 0% Varies — potentially £10,000s on disposal
Interest income tax 20/40/45% (above PSA) 0% Already sheltered in S&S ISA
Tax on withdrawal Income tax on pension drawdown 0% 20-45% saving vs pension on withdrawal

On a £1 million stocks and shares ISA generating 3% dividends (£30,000/year), you’d save roughly £6,000–£10,000 per year in dividend tax alone. The lifetime tax saving can easily exceed £200,000.

ISA Millionaire Strategy by Age

Starting age Annual contribution Target age for £1m (at 7%) Strategy notes
20 £10,000 53 Time is your biggest asset; even modest contributions compound massively
25 £15,000 52 Start early, increase as salary grows
30 £20,000 54 Max allowance from the start — aggressive but effective
35 £20,000 59 Still achievable; consistency is key
40 £20,000 64 Tight but possible — consider slightly higher-growth allocation
45 £20,000 69 Harder; every year of delay costs significantly
50 £20,000 74 May reach £600-700k; still life-changing

Starting at 25 with £15,000/year gets you to £1 million by your early 50s — possible for many professional-salary earners.

Can’t Max Out? Here’s What Smaller Amounts Achieve

Not everyone can invest £20,000 per year. Here’s what consistent smaller amounts build at 7% average returns:

Monthly amount Annual total After 20 years After 30 years After 40 years
£100 £1,200 £52,000 £122,000 £256,000
£250 £3,000 £131,000 £306,000 £640,000
£500 £6,000 £262,000 £612,000 £1,280,000
£750 £9,000 £393,000 £918,000 £1,920,000
£1,000 £12,000 £524,000 £1,224,000 £2,560,000
£1,500 £18,000 £786,000 £1,836,000 £3,840,000
£1,667 £20,000 £873,000 £2,040,000 £4,267,000

Even £500/month for 40 years reaches £1.28 million. The key is starting early and being consistent.

The ISA Millionaire Roadmap

Phase Years Focus Actions
Foundation 1–5 Build the habit Set up automatic monthly investment; choose low-cost global index fund
Growth 5–15 Increase contributions Raise amount as salary grows; don’t touch the pot
Acceleration 15–25 Compounding takes over Growth exceeds contributions; stay invested through volatility
Arrival 25+ £1 million+ Consider de-risking gradually if approaching retirement

The hardest part is the first 5 years, when contributions dwarf returns and progress feels slow. After 15 years, the compound effect accelerates dramatically.

Common Mistakes That Derail the Plan

Mistake Impact Solution
Starting late Every 5-year delay costs ~£250,000 at £20k/year Start immediately with whatever you can
Withdrawing during market dips Locks in losses and breaks compounding Keep a separate emergency fund; never raid your ISA
Paying high fees 1% extra fees costs £300,000+ over 30 years Use index funds on low-cost platforms
Trying to time the market Missing the best 10 days over 20 years halves your returns Invest consistently; auto-invest monthly
Using cash ISA for long-term goals Cash barely beats inflation Stocks and shares ISA for anything 5+ years away
Not using your full allowance Unused allowance is gone forever Use it or lose it — £20,000/year doesn’t roll over

ISA vs Pension: Which Gets You to £1 Million Faster?

Factor ISA Pension
Tax relief on contributions None 20-45% (government tops up)
Tax-free growth Yes Yes
Tax on withdrawal None Income tax (20-45%)
Access age Any time From 57 (rising to 58 in 2028)
Annual limit £20,000 £60,000 (or 100% of earnings)
Lifetime limit None Abolished (previously £1,073,100)

Pensions get you to a larger pot faster (thanks to tax relief on the way in), but ISAs win on flexibility and tax-free withdrawals. The optimal strategy uses both — contribute enough to get full employer match on your pension, then max your ISA.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs)