Choosing the right savings account can make a meaningful difference to how quickly your money grows. Each type has its own trade-offs between access, interest rates, and flexibility — understanding these helps you pick the right account for each of your savings goals.
Easy Access Savings Accounts
The most flexible type of savings account. You can deposit and withdraw money at any time without penalty.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Access | Immediate — withdraw anytime |
| Interest rate | Moderate (typically 0.5–1.0% below the best fixed rates) |
| Minimum deposit | Usually £1 |
| Withdrawal limits | None (some limit number of withdrawals per year) |
| Best for | Emergency funds, short-term savings, money you might need |
Considerations
Easy access rates can change at any time — lenders may cut rates after an attractive introductory period. Check your rate regularly and switch if it drops significantly.
Top tip: Use an easy access account for your emergency fund — three to six months of essential expenses that you may need at short notice.
Fixed Rate Savings (Bonds)
You lock your money away for a set period (typically one to five years) in exchange for a guaranteed, usually higher, interest rate.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Access | Locked for the fixed period |
| Interest rate | Higher than easy access (reward for locking money) |
| Terms | 1, 2, 3, or 5 years most common |
| Early withdrawal | Usually not possible, or heavy penalty |
| Best for | Money you definitely will not need for the fixed period |
Typical Rate Comparison
| Term | Typical Rate (2026) |
|---|---|
| Easy access | 4.0–4.5% |
| 1-year fix | 4.3–4.8% |
| 2-year fix | 4.1–4.6% |
| 3-year fix | 4.0–4.4% |
| 5-year fix | 3.8–4.2% |
Longer fixes do not always pay the highest rates — if the market expects interest rates to fall, shorter fixes may pay more. This is called an inverted yield curve.
Notice Accounts
A middle ground between easy access and fixed rate. You can withdraw money, but you must give advance notice (typically 30, 60, 90, or 120 days).
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Access | After notice period (30–120 days) |
| Interest rate | Between easy access and fixed rate |
| Flexibility | Better than fixed — you can access money with planning |
| Best for | Savings you are unlikely to need urgently |
Notice accounts suit people who want a higher rate than easy access but are uncomfortable locking money away completely.
Regular Saver Accounts
These offer headline-grabbing interest rates but only on limited monthly deposits — typically £25–£300 per month for 12 months.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Monthly deposit | £25–£300 (varies by provider) |
| Interest rate | Often the highest on the market (6–8%) |
| Term | Usually 12 months |
| Withdrawals | May reduce rate or close the account |
| Best for | Building a savings habit with a small monthly amount |
The Catch
The high rate applies only to a small amount deposited monthly, not a lump sum. On a regular saver paying 7% with a £300 monthly limit, your actual interest over 12 months is approximately £136 — because the average balance over the year is much lower than the final balance.
Regular savers are still well worth using — free money is free money — but they should be part of a wider savings strategy, not your only account.
Cash ISAs
A Cash ISA works like a normal savings account, but interest is completely tax-free. You can save up to £20,000 per tax year across all ISA types.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Tax on interest | None — always tax-free |
| Annual limit | £20,000 (shared with other ISA types) |
| Access | Depends on type (easy access, fixed, etc.) |
| Best for | Savers who exceed their Personal Savings Allowance, higher/additional rate taxpayers |
Since the Personal Savings Allowance covers £1,000 (basic rate) or £500 (higher rate) of interest, Cash ISAs are most valuable for people with larger savings or higher tax rates.
Children’s Savings Accounts
For saving on behalf of a child:
| Account | Annual Limit | Tax Protection | Access |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junior ISA | £9,000/year | Tax-free | Child at 18 |
| Child savings account | No limit | Child’s own tax allowance | Varies |
| Junior SIPP | £3,600/year (gross) | Tax relief + tax-free growth | Child at 57+ |
Junior ISAs are the main choice for parents — the money belongs to the child and becomes accessible at 18.
Personal Savings Allowance
Before choosing between taxable accounts and ISAs, understand how much interest you can earn tax-free:
| Tax Band | Personal Savings Allowance |
|---|---|
| Basic rate (20%) | £1,000 |
| Higher rate (40%) | £500 |
| Additional rate (45%) | £0 |
If you earn less than £1,000 (basic rate) or £500 (higher rate) in savings interest, you pay no tax regardless of account type — and a normal savings account may pay a higher rate than the equivalent ISA.
Building a Savings Strategy
A practical approach uses multiple accounts for different purposes:
- Emergency fund — 3–6 months’ expenses in an easy access account
- Short-term goals (1–2 years) — house deposit, holiday fund in a notice account or short fixed term
- Medium-term goals (3–5 years) — car, home improvements in a longer fixed term
- Monthly habit — spare income into a regular saver for the best rate on small amounts
- Long-term growth — money you won’t need for 5+ years in a Stocks and Shares ISA
Use our savings goal calculator to work out how much you need to save each month to reach your target.