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 |
Related Guides
- ISA Guide — all ISA types explained
- Pension Tax Relief Guide — maximising relief
- Salary Sacrifice Guide — save tax and NI
- Stocks and Shares ISA Guide — investing tax-free
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:
- Pension first up to the employer match maximum
- ISA for medium-term goals (home, career break, children’s cost)
- Pension for additional long-term savings if a higher rate taxpayer or building retirement pot
- 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.