Savings & Investments

Gilts and Bonds Guide UK — Government & Corporate Bonds Explained

Understand UK government gilts and corporate bonds. How they work, yields, risks, and how to include bonds in your investment portfolio for stability and income.

Bonds and gilts are the foundation of the fixed-income investment world. They offer predictable income, lower risk than shares, and a valuable role in balancing a diversified investment portfolio. With yields now at their most attractive levels in over a decade, understanding how they work is especially relevant.

What Is a Bond?

A bond is a loan from an investor to a borrower — typically a government or a company. The borrower pays:

  1. Regular interest payments (called the coupon) — usually twice a year for gilts, annually or semi-annually for corporate bonds
  2. Return of the original investment (the face value or par value) at a set date in the future (the maturity date)

Example: A Simple Gilt

FeatureDetail
BondUK Treasury 4.5% 2032
Face value£100
Coupon4.5% (£4.50 per year per £100 face value)
Maturity2032
Interest payments£2.25 every six months
At maturityYou receive your £100 back

If you hold this gilt to maturity, you know exactly what income you’ll receive and exactly when you’ll get your money back. This certainty is the core appeal of bonds.

Types of UK Bonds

UK Government Gilts

TypeDescriptionRisk
Conventional giltsFixed coupon, fixed maturityVery low
Index-linked giltsCoupon and maturity value adjust with inflation (RPI)Very low
Treasury billsShort-term (under 1 year), no coupon, sold at a discountVery low

Corporate Bonds

TypeDescriptionRisk
Investment-gradeIssued by large, financially strong companies (rated BBB or above)Low–Medium
High-yield (junk bonds)Issued by less financially secure companies (rated below BBB)Medium–High

Other Types

  • Local authority bonds — issued by UK councils
  • Retail bonds — corporate bonds specifically aimed at individual investors
  • Emerging market bonds — issued by developing country governments

Understanding Bond Yields

The yield tells you the return you’ll earn on a bond at its current price. Key yield concepts:

Coupon Yield

Simply the annual coupon divided by the face value: a 4% coupon on a £100 bond = 4%.

Current Yield

The annual coupon divided by the current market price. If that 4% coupon bond is trading at £95, the current yield is 4.21% (£4 ÷ £95).

Yield to Maturity (YTM)

The total return you will earn if you buy the bond at today’s price and hold it to maturity, accounting for both coupon payments and any capital gain or loss at maturity. This is the most useful measure for comparison.

The Inverse Relationship: Price and Yield

Bond prices and yields move in opposite directions. When interest rates rise:

  • New bonds offer higher coupons
  • Existing bonds with lower coupons become less attractive
  • Existing bond prices fall to make their yield competitive

When interest rates fall, the reverse happens — existing bonds become more valuable. This is why fixed-income portfolios can lose value in the short term when the Bank of England raises rates.

Why Hold Bonds?

1. Predictable Income

Bonds pay a known amount at known intervals — ideal for investors who need reliable income, such as retirees.

2. Lower Volatility Than Shares

Bonds (especially gilts) are far less volatile than equities. A portfolio with a bond allocation will generally experience smaller drops in value during stock market downturns.

3. Diversification

Bonds often move in the opposite direction to shares — when stocks fall, government bonds tend to rise as investors seek safety. This counterbalancing effect smooths your overall portfolio returns.

4. Capital Preservation

If you hold a bond to maturity, you receive the face value back (assuming no default). This provides certainty that equities cannot match.

How to Add Bonds to Your Portfolio

Individual Gilts

Buy directly through the Debt Management Office or via an investment platform. Best for investors who want to hold specific maturities to match future spending needs.

Bond Funds and ETFs

A bond fund holds hundreds of bonds, providing diversification and simplicity:

Fund TypeExample UseTypical Yield
Short-term gilt fundLow volatility, near-cash4–5%
All gilts fundBroad UK government bond exposure4–5%
Index-linked gilt fundInflation protection1–2% (plus inflation)
Investment-grade corporate bond fundHigher yield with moderate risk5–6%
Strategic bond fundActively managed across bond types5–7%

Allocation Guidelines

A common rule of thumb is to hold your age as a percentage in bonds — so a 40-year-old might hold 40% bonds, 60% equities. However, this is a rough guide:

Age / StageSuggested Bond Allocation
20s–30s (long time horizon)0–20%
40s–50s (medium horizon)20–40%
Late 50s–60s (approaching retirement)40–60%
In retirement40–70%

Adjust based on your risk tolerance, other income sources, and when you need the money. Use our ISA calculator to model how different equity/bond splits might grow over time.

Tax on Bonds

Bond TypeIncome TaxCapital Gains Tax
GiltsCoupon is taxable incomeExempt from CGT
Corporate bondsTaxable incomeExempt if a qualifying bond
Bond fundsTaxable incomeTaxable gains
All bonds in ISA/SIPPTax-freeTax-free

The CGT exemption on gilts makes them attractive for higher-rate taxpayers investing outside an ISA.

Risks of Bonds

  • Interest rate risk — bond prices fall when interest rates rise
  • Inflation risk — fixed coupons lose purchasing power if inflation exceeds the yield
  • Credit risk — corporate bonds may default (extremely rare for gilts)
  • Reinvestment risk — when your bond matures, you may only be able to reinvest at lower rates
  • Liquidity risk — some corporate bonds are hard to sell at a fair price

For most investors, holding bonds through a diversified fund within a Stocks and Shares ISA or pension is the simplest and most tax-efficient approach.