Budgeting UK 2026 — Systems, Methods and Practical Money Management

Christmas Savings Clubs — Are They Worth It? UK Guide

A comparison of Christmas savings clubs, supermarket savings schemes, and alternative ways to save for Christmas. How they work, which are protected, and whether they're the best option.

Christmas savings clubs help you spread the cost of Christmas over the year by saving a fixed amount each week or month. Here is how they work, which are safe, and whether you would be better off saving another way.

How Christmas Savings Clubs Work

FeatureDetail
How you savePay a fixed amount weekly, fortnightly, or monthly throughout the year
When you get your moneyNovember — typically as vouchers, hampers, or store cards
Payment methodsDirect debit, online payment, or cash through an agent
What you receivePrepaid vouchers (Love2shop, store vouchers), hampers, or gifts
BonusSome schemes add a small bonus (2%–3%) on top of what you save
Cancel?You can usually cancel and get your money back, minus any bonus

Available Christmas Savings Schemes

Hamper-Style Clubs

SchemeWhat you getFCA regulated?Bonus
Park Christmas SavingsLove2shop vouchers, supermarket vouchers, hampersYes (e-money)Small bonus on qualifying orders
Variety Christmas ClubVouchers and hampersCheck latest statusSmall bonus

Supermarket Savings Cards

SupermarketHow it worksProtected?Bonus
Tesco Christmas SaverLoad money onto a card throughout the year, spend in Tesco stores November–DecemberNot FSCS-protectedCheck current offer — has previously offered up to 5% bonus
Asda Christmas Savings CardLoad money monthly, receive a card to spend in-storeNot FSCS-protectedCheck current offer
Iceland Bonus Savings CardSave regularly and receive a bonus on topNot FSCS-protectedHas previously offered 2%–4%
MorrisonsCheck availability — schemes vary year to yearNot FSCS-protectedVaries

Note: Supermarket schemes change annually. Check each supermarket’s website from January/February for the current year’s scheme.

Credit Union Christmas Savings

FeatureDetail
How it worksOpen a Christmas savings account at your local credit union
When can you access?Typically released in November
FSCS protected?Yes — up to £85,000
Interest/dividendVaries by credit union — typically 1%–3%
FlexibilityCan withdraw earlier if needed (though not encouraged)
Find onefindyourcreditunion.co.uk

Are Christmas Clubs Worth It?

Pros

AdvantageWhy it matters
Forced savingYou commit early and can’t easily dip into the money
Spreads the costSmall regular payments instead of a large December outgoing
Removes temptationMoney is not sitting in your current account
ConvenientAutomatic payments — set and forget
Social accountabilitySome schemes use local agents — sense of commitment

Cons

DisadvantageWhy it matters
Low/no interestMost clubs pay little or no interest — worse than a savings account
Locked into vouchersYou receive vouchers, not cash — limited where you can spend
Not always protectedSome schemes are not FCA-regulated — risk of loss if company fails
InflexibleYou can’t easily access the money if you need it for an emergency
Voucher expirySome vouchers have expiry dates
Miss better dealsBeing locked into vouchers means you can’t shop around for the best prices elsewhere

Christmas Club vs Alternative Savings — Comparison

Saving £50 per month for 10 months (January–October):

MethodTotal savedReturns/bonusTotal availableWhere you can spendProtected?
Park Christmas Savings£500~£10–£15 bonus (2–3%)~£510–£515 in vouchersShops accepting Love2shopYes (FCA e-money)
Tesco Christmas Saver£500~£25 bonus (if 5% offered)~£525 in TescoTesco onlyNo
Credit union Christmas account£500~£5–£15 dividend (1–3%)~£505–£515 in cashAnywhereYes (FSCS)
Regular saver account (6% AER)£500~£14.50 interest~£514.50 in cashAnywhereYes (FSCS)
Easy-access savings (4.5% AER)£500~£10 interest~£510 in cashAnywhereYes (FSCS)
Cash ISA (4% AER)£500~£9 interest (tax-free)~£509 in cashAnywhereYes (FSCS)
Jar under the bed£500£0£500 in cashAnywhereNo

Key takeaways:

  • A savings account pays similar or better returns and gives you cash, not vouchers
  • A credit union offers the best of both worlds — discipline of a Christmas account plus FSCS protection and cash
  • Christmas clubs make sense if you genuinely cannot resist dipping into a savings account

Safety and Protection

Scheme typeRegulationWhat happens if the company fails?
FCA-regulated e-money (e.g. Park)FCA regulatedYour money should be safeguarded — ring-fenced from company’s own funds
Supermarket savings cardsNot specifically regulatedMoney is a credit with the supermarket — at risk if the retailer fails
Credit unionFCA regulated, FSCS memberProtected up to £85,000 by the FSCS
Bank savings accountFCA regulated, FSCS memberProtected up to £85,000 by the FSCS

The Farepak Lesson

DetailInformation
What happenedFarepak Christmas savings club collapsed in October 2006
Impact~150,000 customers lost approximately £40 million in savings
WhyCompany was not regulated — customer money was not ring-fenced
OutcomeLed to calls for regulation of Christmas savings schemes
LessonAlways check that a scheme is FCA-regulated before saving

Budget Template — Christmas Costs

Use this to work out how much you need to save:

CategoryBudget
Gifts — children£
Gifts — partner£
Gifts — parents/grandparents£
Gifts — other family£
Gifts — friends£
Christmas food and drink£
Christmas dinner/meal out£
Decorations and tree£
Wrapping paper, cards, postage£
Party/event clothes£
Christmas activities/pantomime£
Travel to see family£
Total Christmas budget£

Divide your total by 10 (months January–October) or 12 for the monthly amount you need to save.

Average UK Christmas Spending

CategoryAverage spend (per household)
Gifts£400–£600
Food and drink£150–£250
Socialising and events£100–£200
Decorations£30–£60
Travel£50–£150
Total£730–£1,260

Tips for Saving for Christmas

TipDetails
Start in January12 months of saving = smaller monthly amounts
Set up a separate accountKeep Christmas money away from everyday spending
Automate paymentsStanding order on payday — treat it as a bill
Track spending as you goUse a spreadsheet or app to avoid overspending
Buy gifts throughout the yearSales in January, mid-year clearances
Set a per-person budgetAgree spending limits with family
Use cashback sitesTopCashback and Quidco for online gift shopping
Consider Secret SantaOne gift instead of buying for everyone

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Everyday money