Child Trust Fund Turning 18 — How to Access Your Money and What to Do With It
Your Child Trust Fund (CTF) matures at 18. How to find it, access the money, transfer to an ISA, and make the most of your savings. Complete 2026 guide.
·6 min read
If you were born between 1 September 2002 and 2 January 2011, you almost certainly have a Child Trust Fund (CTF). These accounts are now maturing as the first generation turns 18 — and there is an estimated £2 billion sitting in accounts that have not been claimed.
What Is a Child Trust Fund?
Detail
Information
What
A tax-free savings account opened by the government for every child born 2002–2011
Government contribution
£250 at birth (£500 for low-income families)
Second payment
£250 at age 7 (£500 for low-income families)
Additional contributions
Parents, family, and friends could add more — up to £9,000/year (later £4,368)
Tax treatment
Growth is completely tax-free
Access
Only the named child can withdraw — and only from age 18
Replaced by
Junior ISA from November 2011
How Much Could Be in Your CTF?
Scenario
Estimated value at 18
Government contributions only (£500 total) — cash CTF
~£600–£700
Government contributions only — stocks and shares CTF
~£800–£1,500+
Parents added £50/month for 18 years
~£12,000–£15,000+
Maximum contributions each year
Potentially £50,000+
Average CTF value
~£2,000–£2,500
The actual amount depends on which type of CTF you have (cash or stocks and shares) and how investments have performed.
How to Find Your CTF
Step by Step
Step
Action
1
Go to gov.uk/child-trust-funds/find-a-child-trust-fund
2
Sign in with your Government Gateway account (create one if needed)
3
HMRC will tell you the provider holding your CTF
4
Contact the provider directly to access or manage your account
Other Ways to Find It
Method
Detail
Ask your parents
They may have the original paperwork or annual statements
Check old paperwork
Look for letters from HMRC or a CTF provider
Contact common providers
One Family, The Share Centre, Foresters Financial, NS&I — some of the largest
HMRC helpline
0300 200 3300
Important: Many CTFs were set up automatically by HMRC when parents did not choose a provider. These “Revenue-allocated” accounts were placed with providers chosen by HMRC and parents may never have received the details.
What to Do When You Turn 18
Your Options
Option
Pros
Cons
Transfer to an adult ISA
Keeps tax-free status, money stays invested, uses none of your annual ISA allowance
You don’t get the cash immediately
Transfer to a Lifetime ISA
Tax-free growth PLUS 25% government bonus towards first home or retirement
Money locked in until age 60 (unless buying first home), penalty for early withdrawal
Withdraw the cash
Full access to spend as you wish
Loses tax-free status permanently — any future savings will be taxable
Leave it in the CTF
No action needed
CTF products often have higher fees and fewer options than ISAs
Best Option for Most People: Transfer to an ISA
Transferring your CTF into an ISA keeps the money tax-free and does not count against your annual £20,000 ISA allowance. This is a direct transfer — the money moves from one tax-free wrapper to another.
ISA type
Best for
Cash ISA
If you need the money within 1–3 years (e.g. emergency fund, car)
Stocks and Shares ISA
If you can leave it invested for 5+ years (best for long-term growth)
Lifetime ISA
If you’re saving for a first home or retirement (get 25% government bonus up to £1,000/year)
How to Transfer CTF to an ISA
Step
Action
1
Choose which ISA you want to transfer to
2
Open the ISA with your chosen provider (many accept transfers from CTFs)
3
Ask the new ISA provider to initiate a transfer — do not withdraw and re-deposit
4
The transfer usually takes 2–4 weeks
5
No annual allowance is used
Do not withdraw and re-deposit. If you take the cash out and then put it into an ISA, it counts against your annual £20,000 ISA allowance. A direct transfer avoids this.
What to Do With the Money — By Goal
Emergency Fund
Detail
Guidance
How much
3–6 months of essential expenses
Where to keep it
Cash ISA or easy-access savings account
Why first
Having an emergency fund prevents debt when unexpected costs arise
Saving for a House Deposit
Detail
Guidance
Best vehicle
Lifetime ISA (LISA) — 25% government bonus on up to £4,000/year
5%–8% average annual returns over the long term (not guaranteed)
Risk
Value goes up and down — only invest money you won’t need for 5+ years
£2,000 invested at 18, left for 40 years at 7%/year
Could grow to approximately £30,000
Paying Off Debt
If you have high-interest debt (credit cards, overdrafts), using your CTF money to clear it may be the best financial decision — the interest saved outweighs any investment return.
If You Don’t Do Anything
What happens
Detail
CTF stays with current provider
Money remains invested or in cash
No penalty
There is no deadline to act
BUT
CTF products often have higher fees than ISAs
And
You may have limited investment options
Your right to the money
The money is yours — nobody else can access it
Common Questions
Question
Answer
Can my parents take the money?
No — only the named account holder (you) can access it from age 18
Do I pay tax on CTF money?
No — growth in a CTF is tax-free. However, if you withdraw and put it in a normal savings account, future interest may be taxable
What if I can’t find which provider has my CTF?
Use the HMRC tool at gov.uk or call 0300 200 3300
Can I transfer part of the CTF to an ISA?
Yes — you can do a full or partial transfer
Is there a deadline to claim?
No — the money is yours indefinitely. But the sooner you move it to a competitive ISA, the better
What about Junior ISAs?
If your CTF was transferred to a Junior ISA, the same rules apply at 18
Action Checklist
Step
Action
Done?
1
Find your CTF at gov.uk/child-trust-funds
☐
2
Check how much is in the account
☐
3
Decide what to do with it (ISA transfer, LISA, withdraw)
☐
4
If transferring to ISA — open the ISA and request a transfer
☐
5
If opening a LISA — consider using the annual £4,000 limit for the 25% bonus
☐
6
Set up regular contributions to your new ISA if possible