Savings & Investing
SIPP vs LISA — Which Should You Choose for Retirement?
Compare SIPP and Lifetime ISA for retirement savings. Tax benefits, contribution limits, access rules, and which option suits your situation.
SIPPs and Lifetime ISAs both help you save for retirement with tax benefits. Here’s how to choose between them.
Quick Comparison
| Feature |
SIPP |
Lifetime ISA |
| Annual limit |
£60,000 |
£4,000 |
| Tax benefit |
Tax relief (20-45%) |
25% government bonus |
| Access age |
55 (57 from 2028) |
60 |
| Early withdrawal |
Tax on full amount, no penalty |
25% penalty |
| First home use |
No |
Yes (up to £450,000 property) |
| Age to open |
Any |
18-39 |
How SIPP Tax Relief Works
You receive income tax relief on pension contributions:
| Your Tax Rate |
You Pay |
Tax Relief |
Total in SIPP |
| Basic (20%) |
£80 |
£20 |
£100 |
| Higher (40%) |
£60 |
£40 |
£100 |
| Additional (45%) |
£55 |
£45 |
£100 |
Basic rate relief (20%) is added automatically. Higher/additional rate relief is claimed via Self Assessment.
Employer Contributions
If your employer contributes to your SIPP:
- No personal tax on the contribution
- Corporation Tax deduction for employer
- Doesn’t count against your earnings limit
How LISA Bonus Works
| Your Contribution |
Government Bonus |
Total in LISA |
| £1,000 |
£250 |
£1,250 |
| £2,000 |
£500 |
£2,500 |
| £4,000 |
£1,000 |
£5,000 |
The 25% bonus is the same regardless of your tax rate.
Which Gives Better Returns?
Basic Rate Taxpayer
| £4,000 contributed |
SIPP |
LISA |
| Tax relief/bonus |
£1,000 (20%) |
£1,000 (25%) |
| Total invested |
£5,000 |
£5,000 |
| Winner |
|
LISA |
LISA wins because 25% > 20%.
Higher Rate Taxpayer
| £4,000 contributed |
SIPP |
LISA |
| Tax relief |
£2,000 (40%) |
£1,000 (25%) |
| Total invested |
£6,000 |
£5,000 |
| Winner |
SIPP |
|
SIPP wins for higher rate taxpayers.
Additional Rate Taxpayer
| £4,000 contributed |
SIPP |
LISA |
| Tax relief |
£2,250 (45%) |
£1,000 (25%) |
| Total invested |
£6,250 |
£5,000 |
| Winner |
SIPP |
|
SIPP wins easily at additional rate.
Contribution Limits
| Account |
Annual Limit |
Notes |
| SIPP |
£60,000 |
Or 100% of earnings (lower) |
| LISA |
£4,000 |
Fixed maximum |
SIPP Limits in Detail
| Situation |
Limit |
| Standard |
£60,000 |
| Income over £260,000 |
Tapered to £10,000 |
| Carry forward |
Use last 3 years’ unused allowance |
LISA Limits in Detail
| Situation |
Limit |
| Maximum per year |
£4,000 |
| Can’t carry forward |
Use it or lose it |
| Multiple LISAs |
Total still £4,000 |
Access and Withdrawal Rules
SIPP Withdrawals
| Age |
What You Can Take |
| Before 55 (57 from 2028) |
Nothing (except terminal illness) |
| From 55 |
25% tax-free, rest taxed as income |
| 75+ |
Same rules apply |
LISA Withdrawals
| Purpose |
Rules |
| First home (up to £450,000) |
Full amount + bonus, no penalty |
| Age 60+ |
Full amount + bonus, no penalty |
| Terminal illness |
Full amount + bonus, no penalty |
| Any other reason |
25% penalty on entire amount |
The LISA Penalty Explained
| You Put In |
Bonus Added |
Total |
Less 25% Penalty |
You Get Back |
| £4,000 |
£1,000 |
£5,000 |
-£1,250 |
£3,750 |
You lose your bonus plus some of your own money if you withdraw early for non-qualifying reasons.
Property Purchase Option
A major LISA advantage: you can use it for your first home.
LISA for First Home
| Requirement |
Details |
| First-time buyer |
Never owned property before |
| Property value |
Up to £450,000 |
| Use for deposit |
Goes to solicitor on completion |
| Hold period |
Account open 12+ months |
SIPP Cannot Buy Your Home
You cannot use SIPP funds to buy your personal residence. Commercial property is allowed within some SIPPs, but not residential property for personal use.
When to Choose a SIPP
| Situation |
Why SIPP |
| Higher/additional rate taxpayer |
Better tax relief |
| Want to save more than £4,000/year |
Higher limit |
| Employer contributions |
Can add to SIPP |
| Already own a home |
LISA home benefit irrelevant |
| Over 39 |
Can’t open new LISA |
When to Choose a LISA
| Situation |
Why LISA |
| Basic rate taxpayer |
25% bonus beats 20% relief |
| Want to buy first home |
Can use for property |
| Under 40 |
Can still open one |
| Want earlier access |
60 vs 57 for SIPP |
| Simple, predictable bonus |
25% regardless of circumstances |
Using Both SIPP and LISA
Nothing stops you contributing to both:
| Strategy |
Approach |
| Maximise both |
£4,000 LISA + SIPP contributions |
| House or retirement |
LISA for flexibility, SIPP for pension |
| Different pots |
Diversify tax treatment |
Example: Higher Rate Taxpayer Strategy
| Account |
Contribution |
Benefit |
| LISA |
£4,000 |
£1,000 bonus (keep flexibility) |
| SIPP |
£16,000 |
£8,000 tax relief (40%) |
| Total invested |
£20,000 actual |
£29,000 pot value |
Investment Options
SIPP Investment Range
| Available |
Details |
| Funds |
Thousands of funds |
| ETFs |
Full range |
| Shares |
Individual stocks |
| Investment trusts |
Wide selection |
| Bonds |
Government and corporate |
LISA Investment Range
| Provider Type |
Investment Options |
| Cash LISA |
Savings interest only |
| Stocks & Shares LISA |
Funds, ETFs, shares (depends on provider) |
Cash LISAs are simpler but may not keep pace with inflation over decades.
Charges Comparison
Typical SIPP Charges
| Provider |
Platform Fee |
| Vanguard |
0.15% (capped £375) |
| AJ Bell |
0.25% (capped £120) |
| Interactive Investor |
£12.99/month |
Typical LISA Charges
| Provider |
Fee |
| AJ Bell |
0.25% |
| Hargreaves Lansdown |
0.45% |
| Nutmeg |
0.45% |
| Cash LISA |
Usually none |
Retirement Income Comparison
At Retirement: SIPP
| What Happens |
Tax Treatment |
| 25% tax-free lump sum |
No tax |
| Remaining 75% |
Taxed as income |
| Drawdown or annuity |
Your choice |
At Retirement: LISA
| What Happens |
Tax Treatment |
| Full amount available |
Completely tax-free |
| No forced pension rules |
Take as you wish |
| No lifetime allowance |
Separate from pension |
LISA money at 60+ is completely tax-free, which can be valuable for retirement income planning.
Death Benefits
SIPP on Death
| Your Age at Death |
Beneficiary Tax |
| Under 75 |
Tax-free to beneficiaries |
| 75+ |
Taxed at beneficiary’s income rate |
LISA on Death
| Situation |
What Happens |
| Dies |
Passes to estate or named beneficiary |
| No penalty |
Bonus kept, no 25% charge |
| Inheritance tax |
May apply depending on estate size |
Summary: Decision Guide
| If You Are… |
Consider |
| Basic rate taxpayer under 40 |
LISA first, then SIPP |
| Higher/additional rate taxpayer |
SIPP for tax relief |
| Might buy first home |
LISA for flexibility |
| Want maximum pension savings |
SIPP (higher limits) |
| Have employer contributions |
SIPP |
| Over 39 |
SIPP only (can’t open new LISA) |
For many young savers, both accounts make sense: LISA for the first £4,000 (especially if homeownership is possible), SIPP for additional retirement savings (especially if higher rate taxpayer).