ISAs UK: Cash, Stocks & Shares, Lifetime, Junior and Transfer Rules

ISA Allowance 2026/27 — Limits, Types, and Rules Explained

Everything you need to know about the ISA allowance for 2026/27 — how much you can save, the different types of ISA, and how to make the most of your tax-free allowance.

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.

Your ISA allowance lets you save or invest up to £20,000 per year completely free from Income Tax, Capital Gains Tax, and Dividend Tax. Unlike regular savings accounts or investment accounts, there is no limit on how much your ISA pot can grow — once money is inside the ISA wrapper, all future returns are permanently sheltered from tax, no matter how large they become.

This makes the ISA one of the most powerful personal finance tools available to UK residents. Used consistently over many years, the tax savings alone can amount to tens of thousands of pounds.

Read more: See our Isas guide for a complete overview of this topic.

ISA Allowance — 2026/27

For the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027), the total ISA allowance is £20,000. This is the maximum you can pay into ISAs across all types combined. You can split this however you need between different ISA types — the rules changed in April 2024 to allow multiple ISAs of the same type — but the combined total cannot exceed £20,000.

The Lifetime ISA has a sub-limit of £4,000 per year, which counts towards your £20,000 total. The Junior ISA allowance is a separate £9,000 and does not count towards your adult limit.

Detail 2026/27
Total ISA allowance £20,000
Cash ISA limit Up to £20,000 (within total)
Stocks and Shares ISA limit Up to £20,000 (within total)
Innovative Finance ISA limit Up to £20,000 (within total)
Lifetime ISA limit £4,000 (within total)
Junior ISA limit £9,000 (separate — does not count towards adult allowance)

The £20,000 is a combined total. You can split it however you like across different ISA types, but cannot exceed £20,000 in total.

ISA Allowance History

The ISA annual allowance has been frozen at £20,000 since 2017/18, despite inflation significantly eroding its real value over that time. In real terms, the buying power of a £20,000 ISA contribution is now meaningfully lower than it was when the limit was set. There have been occasional calls to raise the limit, but as of 2026 it remains at £20,000.

Tax year Annual ISA allowance Junior ISA allowance
2024/25 £20,000 £9,000
2025/26 £20,000 £9,000
2026/27 £20,000 £9,000

Types of ISA

There are four main types of ISA for adults. Each serves a different purpose, and many people benefit from holding more than one type.

The Cash ISA is the simplest. Your money earns interest — just like a regular savings account — but the interest is completely tax-free. This is the right choice for emergency funds, short-term saving goals, and anyone who does not want to take investment risk.

The Stocks and Shares ISA holds investments — shares, funds, ETFs, bonds — rather than cash. Your returns are not guaranteed and your capital is at risk, but over long periods investments have historically grown far more than cash savings. All gains, dividends, and interest within the ISA are tax-free regardless of the size of your pot.

The Lifetime ISA (LISA) is specifically designed for two purposes: buying a first home, or saving for retirement from age 60. The government adds a 25% bonus on top of your contributions, up to £1,000 per year. But there is a significant penalty for withdrawing for any other reason — so it should only be used for its intended purposes.

The Innovative Finance ISA (IFISA) holds peer-to-peer lending investments. These tend to offer higher interest rates than Cash ISAs but carry meaningful risk — the loans you are funding could default, and the FSCS does not protect investment losses.

ISA type What it holds Risk level Best for
Cash ISA Cash savings — earns interest None (capital protected) Short-term savings, emergency fund, risk-averse savers
Stocks and Shares ISA Investments — funds, shares, bonds, ETFs Medium–High (capital at risk) Long-term growth (5+ years), building wealth
Innovative Finance ISA (IFISA) Peer-to-peer lending Medium–High (capital at risk) Higher interest seekers willing to accept lending risk
Lifetime ISA (LISA) Cash or investments + 25% government bonus Depends on type chosen First home purchase or retirement (18–39 year olds)
Junior ISA (JISA) Cash or investments — held until child turns 18 Depends on type chosen Saving for children’s future

Tax Benefits of ISAs

The core tax advantage of an ISA is simple: everything sheltered within it is free from UK tax — income tax on interest, capital gains tax on profits, and dividend tax on dividends received. There is also no need to declare ISA income on a Self Assessment tax return.

This contrasts with accounts outside an ISA, where interest is taxable above the Personal Savings Allowance (£1,000 for basic rate taxpayers), gains above £3,000 are subject to CGT, and dividends above £500 are taxed.

Crucially, the ISA has no ceiling on tax-free returns. Once money is inside, all future growth — no matter how large — remains sheltered. A Stocks and Shares ISA worth £200,000 generating dividends and capital gains of £15,000 per year pays zero tax on that income. A regular account would owe significant tax.

Tax ISA treatment
Income Tax on interest Tax-free — no tax on Cash ISA interest
Capital Gains Tax Tax-free — no CGT on profits from Stocks and Shares ISA
Dividend Tax Tax-free — no tax on dividends received within an ISA
Reporting None — no need to declare ISA income on your tax return

How to Split Your Allowance — Examples

There is no single right way to use your ISA allowance — it depends on your goals, timeline, and risk appetite. Common approaches include:

  • All in Cash ISA if you are saving for a goal within 2–3 years, or want complete capital protection
  • All in Stocks and Shares ISA if you are investing for 10+ years and comfortable with investment risk
  • Split between Cash and Stocks & Shares for a mix of accessible savings plus long-term growth
  • Including a LISA if you are a first-time buyer or under 40 wanting to make the most of the government bonus
Scenario Cash ISA Stocks & Shares ISA LISA Total
All in cash £20,000 £0 £0 £20,000
All invested £0 £20,000 £0 £20,000
Balanced £10,000 £10,000 £0 £20,000
First-time buyer (under 40) £6,000 £10,000 £4,000 £20,000
Young saver £5,000 £11,000 £4,000 £20,000
Risk-averse £16,000 £4,000 £0 £20,000

Cash ISA — Key Details

A Cash ISA works exactly like a regular savings account in terms of how it operates — you deposit money, it earns interest, and you can access it according to the account terms. The critical difference is that the interest is completely tax-free.

With rates currently around 4%–5% AER for the best easy-access Cash ISAs, someone saving £20,000 per year in a Cash ISA could earn £1,000 per year in tax-free interest. For a higher rate taxpayer who would otherwise pay 40% tax on savings interest, the ISA saves them £400 per year compared with an equivalent savings account.

Since April 2024, the rules changed to allow you to open multiple Cash ISAs in the same tax year. This gives you more flexibility to chase the best rates or split your savings across providers for FSCS protection.

Feature Detail
Risk None — your capital is protected
Returns Interest rate set by provider — currently 4%–5% AER
Access Easy-access, notice, or fixed-rate options available
FSCS protection Yes — up to £85,000 per provider (£170,000 for joint)
Multiple Cash ISAs Allowed from April 2024 — can open multiple in the same year
Transfer You can transfer between providers without losing tax-free status
Flexible ISA Some allow you to withdraw and replace in the same year without losing allowance

Cash ISA Types

Type Interest rate (typical) Access Best for
Easy-access 4.0%–4.5% AER Instant Emergency fund, flexibility
Notice (e.g. 90-day) 4.3%–4.8% AER After notice period Money you won’t need for a few months
Fixed-rate (1 year) 4.3%–4.7% AER Locked for 1 year Money you don’t need for 12 months
Fixed-rate (2 years) 4.0%–4.5% AER Locked for 2 years Medium-term savings

Stocks and Shares ISA — Key Details

A Stocks and Shares ISA lets you invest in shares, funds, ETFs, investment trusts, and bonds with complete tax freedom on all returns. Over long periods, investing has historically produced significantly better returns than cash savings — global equities have returned an average of around 7–10% per year over multi-decade periods, far ahead of inflation.

The key trade-off is risk. Unlike Cash ISAs, your capital is not guaranteed. Markets go up and down, and if you need the money within a few years, you risk selling at a loss. Stocks and Shares ISAs are best suited to money you can genuinely invest for five years or more.

For long-term goals like retirement, a diversified Stocks and Shares ISA — holding low-cost global index funds — is typically the most effective savings vehicle available to ordinary investors. The combination of long-term investment returns and permanent tax-freedom is exceptionally powerful.

Feature Detail
Risk Medium–High — your capital is at risk
Returns Variable — historically 7%–10% average annual return for diversified global equities over the long term
Access Can usually sell and withdraw within a few days
What you can hold Funds, shares, investment trusts, ETFs, bonds, gilts
FSCS protection Up to £85,000 if the provider fails (not for investment losses)
Platform fees 0.15%–0.45% per year typically
Fund fees 0.1%–1.5% per year depending on fund type

When to Use a Stocks and Shares ISA vs Cash ISA

The key question is time horizon. If you need the money within three years, cash is almost always safer. Over longer periods, the risk of investing is rewarded with higher expected returns, and the probability of losing money over a 10-year period with a diversified portfolio is historically low.

Timeframe Best option
Under 3 years Cash ISA — too short to absorb investment volatility
3–5 years Cash ISA or a cautious investment mix
5–10 years Stocks and Shares ISA likely to outperform cash over this period
10+ years Stocks and Shares ISA — time in the market is a powerful advantage

Lifetime ISA (LISA) — Key Details

The Lifetime ISA is a hybrid saving and investment product with a unique government bonus. For every £4 you put in, the government adds £1 — meaning a 25% top-up on all contributions. The maximum contribution is £4,000 per year, giving a maximum bonus of £1,000 per year.

The catch is that you can only use the money — without penalty — for one of two purposes: buying your first home (on a property costing up to £450,000) or for retirement from age 60. If you withdraw for any other reason, you pay a 25% penalty on the full withdrawal. At current rates, this means you lose your entire government bonus plus approximately 6.25% of your own money.

If you are a first-time buyer saving for a property worth under £450,000, and you are under 40, a LISA is almost always worth including as part of your savings strategy. The 25% government bonus is essentially free money.

Feature Detail
Annual limit £4,000 (counts towards £20,000 total)
Government bonus 25% — up to £1,000 per year
Use for First home purchase (up to £450,000) or retirement (from age 60)
Age to open 18–39
Age to contribute 18–49
Withdrawal penalty 25% — effectively loses your bonus plus 6.25% of your own money
Cash or investments Both available — choose based on your timeline

LISA for First-Time Buyers

For first-time buyers, the LISA is particularly attractive. If you and your partner are both first-time buyers, you can each have a LISA, giving you combined bonuses of up to £2,000 per year on a combined £8,000 contribution. Opened at 25, you could accumulate over £30,000 in bonuses alone by your mid-30s.

Detail Information
Property price limit Up to £450,000
Account must be open At least 12 months before using for purchase
How it is used Solicitor requests withdrawal from LISA provider for completion
Maximum bonus £1,000/year — up to age 50
With a partner Each person can have their own LISA if both first-time buyers

Junior ISA — Key Details

Parents and guardians can open a Junior ISA for a child under 18. The allowance — £9,000 for 2026/27 — is completely separate from the adult ISA allowance and does not affect it. Anyone can contribute to a child’s JISA, including grandparents, aunts and uncles, and family friends.

The child cannot access the money until they turn 18, at which point it automatically converts to an adult ISA. This makes a JISA an excellent way for families to build a meaningful financial head-start for children. Contributed regularly from birth, a JISA could accumulate tens of thousands of pounds by the time the child reaches adulthood.

Feature Detail
Annual limit £9,000 (separate from adult allowance)
Who can open Parent or legal guardian for a child under 18
Who can contribute Anyone — parents, grandparents, family, friends
Access Child can manage from 16, but can only withdraw from 18
Types Cash JISA or Stocks and Shares JISA
Tax treatment Completely tax-free
At 18 Automatically converts to an adult ISA

Key ISA Rules

Understanding the rules helps you avoid costly mistakes. The most important: the ISA allowance cannot be carried forward. If you do not use your £20,000 allowance by 5 April, that opportunity is gone forever. For most people, maximising the ISA allowance each year is one of the most impactful financial decisions they can make.

Another common mistake is withdrawing money from an ISA and re-depositing it, thinking the deposit is “replacing” what was withdrawn. Unless your ISA is a “flexible ISA” (which explicitly allows this), that re-deposit counts as a new contribution and uses your allowance again.

Rule Detail
Tax year 6 April to 5 April
Use it or lose it Unused allowance cannot be carried forward
Multiple ISAs Allowed from April 2024 — multiple of the same type permitted
Transferring Transfer formally through your provider — do NOT withdraw and re-deposit
Flexible ISAs Allow withdrawals and replacements in the same year without using more allowance
Death ISA loses its status on death, but spouse/civil partner gets Additional Permitted Subscription
Residency Must be UK resident to contribute
Age 18+ for Stocks and Shares ISA; 16+ for Cash ISA

Common ISA Mistakes

Mistake Why it matters
Not using your allowance You lose £20,000 of permanent tax-free potential every year you don’t contribute
Withdrawing and redepositing Unless it’s a flexible ISA, this uses your allowance twice
Keeping too much in cash long-term Inflation erodes real value — investments typically beat cash over 10+ years
Ignoring platform and fund fees A 1% fee difference compounds dramatically over decades
Not transferring old ISAs to better rates Old Cash ISAs often revert to poor rates — transferring is straightforward and tax-free
LISA withdrawal penalty Misusing a LISA costs you your bonus plus extra

ISA Allowance Checklist — Before 5 April

The end of the tax year is the final deadline to use your annual ISA allowance. Even a partial contribution is better than leaving the allowance entirely unused — topping up a Cash ISA by £500 takes only a few minutes online and preserves £500 of permanent tax-free space.

Task Priority
Check how much allowance you’ve used this tax year High
Top up Cash ISA, Stocks and Shares ISA, or LISA High
Transfer old Cash ISAs to better rates Medium
Open a JISA and contribute for children Medium
Review Stocks and Shares ISA performance and fees Annual
Consider LISA contribution if a first-time buyer or under 40 If applicable

Sources

  1. HMRC — Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs)