Savings & Investing

Should I Max Out My ISA or Pension First? — Tax Wrapper Decision Guide

ISA vs pension — which tax wrapper should you prioritise? Compare tax relief, access rules, inheritance, and flexibility to decide the best order for your savings.

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.

Both ISAs and pensions are tax-efficient, but they work differently. The order you fill them matters. Here’s how to decide.

ISA vs Pension — Key Differences

Feature Pension ISA
Tax relief on contributions 20-45% None
Employer contributions Yes No
Tax on growth Tax-free Tax-free
Tax on withdrawals Income tax (75% of pot) Tax-free
25% tax-free lump sum Yes N/A (all tax-free)
Access age 57 (from 2028) Any age
Annual limit £60,000 £20,000
Inheritance tax Usually IHT-free Part of estate
Means-tested benefits Counted Counted

The Optimal Order for Most People

Priority 1: Pension Up to Employer Match

This is free money. If your employer matches up to 5%, contribute at least 5%.

Your contribution Employer match Tax relief (basic rate) Total going in
5% of £35,000 (£1,750) 5% (£1,750) £437 £3,937
5% of £50,000 (£2,500) 5% (£2,500) £625 £5,625

Not contributing enough to get the full employer match is leaving free money on the table.

Priority 2: ISA for Accessible Savings

Build your ISA for:

  • Emergency fund — 3-6 months expenses in a Cash ISA
  • Medium-term goals — house deposit, car, major purchases
  • Early retirement — accessible before pension age
  • Flexibility — no penalties for withdrawing

Priority 3: Extra Pension Contributions

Once your ISA is funded, extra pension contributions are particularly valuable if you’re:

  • A higher-rate taxpayer (40% tax relief)
  • An additional-rate taxpayer (45% tax relief)
  • Using salary sacrifice (also saves National Insurance)

Priority 4: General Investment Account

After maxing both, invest in a General Investment Account (GIA). Less tax-efficient but no contribution cap.

The Maths — Higher-Rate Taxpayer Example

Where £1,000 goes Tax relief Employer match In the pot Accessible?
Pension (salary sacrifice) £400 + NI savings Potentially yes £1,400+ From age 57
Pension (personal) £400 No £1,400 From age 57
ISA £0 No £1,000 Anytime
Savings account £0 No £1,000 (taxed) Anytime

For retirement money, the pension wins. For accessible money, the ISA wins.

When to Prioritise the ISA Over Pension

Situation Why ISA first
No employer pension match No free money being missed
Planning early retirement Need money before 57
Saving for house deposit Need access within 5-10 years
Already maximising pension tax relief ISA adds diversification
Near the pension lifetime issue Excess pension contributions less efficient
Low income / basic rate taxpayer Tax relief advantage smaller

When to Prioritise the Pension Over ISA

Situation Why pension first
Employer matches contributions Free money — always take it
Higher-rate taxpayer (40%+) Massive tax relief
Using salary sacrifice Saves NI too (additional ~8-13%)
Far from retirement Long time for tax-free growth
Concerned about willpower Pension locked away — can’t spend it
Want IHT efficiency Pensions usually outside your estate

Lifetime Comparison

Here’s how £500/month grows over 25 years at 5% annual growth:

Wrapper Monthly in Tax relief boost Monthly total After 25 years
Pension (basic rate) £500 £125 £625 ~£372,000
Pension (higher rate) £500 £333 £833 ~£496,000
ISA £500 £0 £500 ~£298,000

But remember: 75% of pension withdrawals are taxed as income, while ISA withdrawals are fully tax-free.

The Balanced Approach

Most financial planners recommend both:

Life stage Pension focus ISA focus
20s-30s Employer match + 2-3% extra Emergency fund, house deposit
30s-40s Increase to 12-15% total Stocks & Shares ISA for growth
40s-50s Maximise tax relief Bridge to retirement gap
50s-60s Final push before access Early retirement spending pot

The Decision Framework: How to Actually Choose

Rather than a one-size-fits-all answer, the right choice depends on your specific circumstances. Work through this framework:

Step 1: Are You Getting Full Employer Pension Match?

If your employer matches pension contributions up to a certain percentage and you’re not contributing that much — this is your first priority before anything else. Employer contributions are free money. You cannot get them via an ISA.

Example: Employer matches up to 5% of salary. You earn £40,000. Contributing 5% = £2,000. Employer adds £2,000. Immediate 100% return on £2,000.

Step 2: Are You a Higher Rate Taxpayer?

If your income is above the higher rate threshold (£50,270 in 2026/27):

  • Every £100 into pension costs you only £60 (40% relief)
  • ISA contributions have no tax advantage going in
  • The pension’s tax deferral advantage is strongest at higher rates

For higher and additional rate taxpayers, maximising pension before ISA (after securing employer match) is almost always correct.

Step 3: Might You Need the Money Before Age 57?

Pensions cannot be accessed until age 57 (from 2028; currently 55). If you think you might need savings before then:

  • ISA is more flexible — withdraw any time, for any reason
  • A Lifetime ISA can be used for a first home purchase
  • An emergency fund (3–6 months expenses in easy-access savings) should always be built before either pension or ISA

Step 4: Are You on Benefits or Might You Claim Means-Tested Benefits?

  • Pension savings are generally disregarded for means-tested benefits if below State Pension age
  • ISA savings count as capital and can affect Universal Credit and other means-tested benefits once over £16,000 (total savings, not just ISA)

For low-income households, this is a material consideration.

ISA vs Pension: Head-to-Head Over 20 Years

Factor Pension ISA
Tax on contributions Relieved (at your marginal rate) Not relieved
Tax on growth Tax-free within fund Tax-free
Tax on withdrawal Income taxable (except 25% lump sum) Tax-free
Access age 57 (from 2028) Any time
Annual allowance £60,000 (or 100% of earnings) £20,000
What happens on death Paid to nominated beneficiaries, outside Estate (pension reform underway) Part of estate, subject to IHT
Employer can contribute Yes No

The Hybrid Strategy

For most people earning £30,000–£80,000, the optimal strategy is neither all-pension nor all-ISA:

  1. Pension first up to the employer match maximum
  2. ISA for medium-term goals (home, career break, children’s cost)
  3. Pension for additional long-term savings if a higher rate taxpayer or building retirement pot
  4. Review at key life changes: job change, marriage, children, inheritance, approaching retirement

A financial adviser (look for a fee-based FCA-regulated adviser) can help model the numbers for your specific situation.

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Savings
  2. FCA — Saving and investing