I had a £1,000 in an ISA account with Santander on line - now my friend told me about this advert 123 current account you would get more interest in putting into the current account. I then shifted the £1,000 back to current acount. Have I done the right thing since to my knowledge the ISAs are making little interest. Thanks for any replies
At first glance you've lost your Tax free status on interest payments on the ISA.
You've got to keep £1000 minimum in the 123 a/c to qualify and the interest rates are staged.
£1000 to £1999 @ 1%
£2000 to £2999 @ 2%
£3000 upwards @ 3%
I have no idea of the rate in your ISA, what were you getting?
slack alice I have no idea - I am going down to Santander next week because I do have another £8,000 in an ISA account that I took out perhaps about 4 years ago - again this friend said I should have been looking at it every year and shop about to get a better rate say for example from Santander to Nationwide etc.
Once taken out of an ISA you cannot put it back. Depends on what interest rate the ISA is. You don't pay tax on the interest on an ISA where as you do on an ordinary account. So you have to take that into consideration. Tax on savings interest on ordinary account is 20p in each pound you earn.
It is always good to review your interest rates every year. Use one of the comparison sites, then if you find a much better rate ask the new bank to transfer the funds over. Do not withdraw them yourself or you will lose the tax free status.
Something you should consider when shopping around. Don't close the ISA, you transfer it thereby keeping the ISA interest free status. As said before, once closed that is it until the new tax year when you can then use the new tax years allowance.
If you do decide to switch then make sure the one you pick will accept 'transfers in'. They (the new provider) will arrange the necessary paperwork so that you do not lose out on the taxfree bit.
Have a look at the comparison websites for an idea of the current deals, but be aware some of the better ones aren't on them. A little google sleauthing helps ☺
Another thought. Compare the interest rates for easy access against the fixed rate Isa's. You tend to get a better rate to fix but 2 things to think about -
1. Will you need to get access to any of it quickly or can it be left. 2. I would never fix for more than 1 year as interests rates could go up, doubt they can go down much more so if you were to fix for 3 years and the rates did go up, you would lose out.