Savings & Investing

Should I Put My Deposit in a LISA or ISA? — First-Time Buyer Decision

Lifetime ISA vs Cash ISA for your house deposit. Compare the 25% bonus, withdrawal penalties, property price limits, and which is better for first-time buyers saving for a home.

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.

If you’re saving for your first home, choosing between a Lifetime ISA and a regular Cash ISA can mean thousands of pounds difference. Here’s how to decide.

LISA vs Cash ISA — Quick Comparison

Feature Lifetime ISA (LISA) Cash ISA
Government bonus 25% on contributions (up to £1,000/year) None
Annual limit £4,000 £20,000
Age requirement 18-39 to open 18+
Property price limit £450,000 No limit
First-time buyer only? Yes (for property use) No restriction
Withdrawal penalty 25% if not for property or retirement None
Must hold for 12 months minimum No minimum
Interest rates Varies (typically 4-5%) Varies (typically 3-5%)

The LISA Bonus Advantage

The 25% bonus is significant over time:

Years saving Your contributions Government bonus Total (before interest)
1 year £4,000 £1,000 £5,000
2 years £8,000 £2,000 £10,000
3 years £12,000 £3,000 £15,000
5 years £20,000 £5,000 £25,000

Plus interest on the full balance including the bonus.

When the LISA Is the Better Choice

Choose a LISA if:

  • You’re aged 18-39 (must open before 40th birthday)
  • The property will cost under £450,000
  • You’re a first-time buyer (never owned property)
  • You can leave the money for at least 12 months
  • You’re confident you’ll use it for a house or retirement

When a Cash ISA Is Better

Choose a Cash ISA if:

  • You might buy a property over £450,000 (common in London/South East)
  • You’re not sure you’ll buy within the next few years
  • You might need the money for something else — no penalties
  • You’re over 39 and can’t open a LISA
  • You want to save more than £4,000 per year in one account
  • You’ve owned property before (not a first-time buyer)

The Best Strategy — Use Both

For most first-time buyers, the optimal approach is:

Account Amount per year Purpose
LISA £4,000 (max) Get the full 25% bonus
Cash ISA Remaining savings (up to £16,000) Flexible top-up with no restrictions

This gives you the bonus and flexibility.

The LISA Penalty Trap

If you withdraw LISA funds for anything other than a first home (under £450,000) or retirement (age 60+):

Your money in Bonus added Total balance Penalty (25%) You receive Net loss
£4,000 £1,000 £5,000 -£1,250 £3,750 -£250
£12,000 £3,000 £15,000 -£3,750 £11,250 -£750
£20,000 £5,000 £25,000 -£6,250 £18,750 -£1,250

You actually lose money — the penalty takes back the bonus plus 6.25% of your own contributions.

Decision Flowchart

  1. Are you a first-time buyer aged 18-39? → If no, Cash ISA only
  2. Will the property cost under £450,000? → If not sure, use both (LISA + Cash ISA)
  3. Can you lock the money away for 12+ months? → If no, Cash ISA only
  4. Can you save more than £4,000/year? → Put £4,000 in LISA, rest in Cash ISA

LISA vs Help to Buy ISA

The Help to Buy ISA closed to new applicants in November 2019. If you have one:

Feature LISA Help to Buy ISA
Bonus rate 25% 25%
Annual max contribution £4,000 £2,400 (£200/month)
Maximum bonus £1,000/year (no lifetime cap) £3,000 lifetime
Property limit £450,000 £250,000 (£450,000 London)
Bonus paid Monthly into account At completion (solicitor claims)
Can transfer to LISA? Yes Yes (one-way)

If you still have a Help to Buy ISA, transferring to a LISA is usually better.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Lifetime ISA