ISAs UK: Cash, Stocks & Shares, Lifetime, Junior and Transfer RulesInnovative Finance ISA (IFISA) Guide — Peer-to-Peer Lending in an ISA
How Innovative Finance ISAs work, the risks and returns, top IFISA providers, and whether a peer-to-peer lending ISA is right for you.
An Innovative Finance ISA lets you earn tax-free interest by lending your money through peer-to-peer platforms. Here’s how they work and whether they’re right for you.
Read more: See our Isas guide for a complete overview of this topic.
How IFISAs Work
| Element | Detail |
|---|
| ISA type | Innovative Finance ISA (IFISA) |
| Introduced | April 2016 |
| Annual allowance | Part of your £20,000 overall ISA allowance |
| Tax-free | Yes — interest earned is completely tax-free |
| How it works | Your money is lent to borrowers through a P2P platform; you earn interest |
| Risk | Higher than Cash ISA — borrowers can default, capital is at risk |
| FSCS protection | No — not covered by the £85,000 deposit guarantee |
| Withdrawals | Depends on the platform — may be restricted until loans mature |
ISA Comparison
| Feature | Cash ISA | Stocks & Shares ISA | IFISA | Lifetime ISA |
|---|
| Returns | 4–5% (2026) | Variable (historically ~7–10%/year long term) | 3–8% typical | Cash or investment returns + 25% government bonus |
| Risk to capital | None (FSCS protected) | Yes (market risk) | Yes (borrower default risk) | Depends on type |
| FSCS protection | Yes (£85,000) | Yes (£85,000 for platform failure, not investment losses) | No | Depends on type |
| Access | Easy (instant or notice) | Easy (sell investments) | Restricted — may need to wait for loans to mature | Penalty for early withdrawal (except house purchase/age 60) |
| Tax-free | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Best for | Emergency fund, low risk | Long-term growth | Higher returns, comfortable with risk | First home or retirement |
Risk vs Return
| Risk level | Typical return | Loan type | Examples |
|---|
| Lower risk | 3–5% | Property-backed, first charge | Secured against property |
| Medium risk | 5–7% | Business loans, development finance | Secured or partially secured |
| Higher risk | 7–10%+ | Unsecured personal loans, higher-risk businesses | No security — rely on borrower repaying |
Key Risks
| Risk | Detail |
|---|
| Borrower default | Borrowers may not repay — you could lose some or all invested money |
| Platform failure | The P2P platform itself could go bust (wind-down plans should be in place) |
| Illiquidity | You may not be able to withdraw until loans mature — secondary markets exist but aren’t guaranteed |
| No FSCS protection | Unlike a bank, your money isn’t protected if things go wrong |
| Provision fund depletion | Some platforms have default funds, but these can run out in a downturn |
| Concentration risk | Lending to a small number of borrowers increases risk |
How Returns Compare to Cash ISAs
| Scenario | Cash ISA (4.5%) | IFISA (6%) | Difference |
|---|
| £10,000 invested for 1 year | £450 | £600 | +£150 |
| £10,000 invested for 3 years | £1,412 | £1,910 | +£498 |
| £10,000 invested for 5 years | £2,462 | £3,382 | +£920 |
But: The IFISA figures assume no defaults. Even a small default rate reduces returns significantly. And your capital is at risk.
Provision Funds
| Feature | Detail |
|---|
| What they are | A reserve fund set aside by some platforms to cover borrower defaults |
| How they work | If a borrower misses payments, the provision fund pays you instead |
| Are they guaranteed? | No — they can be depleted if too many borrowers default |
| Coverage | Varies — some platforms cover 100% of defaults (if fund is sufficient), others cover a percentage |
Tax Benefits
| Tax position | Without ISA | With IFISA |
|---|
| Personal Savings Allowance (PSA) | First £1,000 tax-free (basic), £500 (higher) | N/A — all interest tax-free |
| Interest above PSA | Taxed at your marginal rate (20/40/45%) | Tax-free |
| Reporting | Must declare on Self-Assessment | No reporting needed |
Is the Tax Benefit Worth It?
| Annual P2P interest | Tax saved (20% taxpayer, above PSA) | Tax saved (40% taxpayer) |
|---|
| £500 | £0 (within PSA) | £0–£200 (may exceed PSA) |
| £1,500 | £100 | £400 |
| £3,000 | £400 | £1,000 |
The tax benefit is most valuable for higher-rate taxpayers and those with large P2P holdings.
Who IFISAs Suit
| Profile | Suitability |
|---|
| Want higher returns than cash savings | Good fit — but understand the risks |
| Comfortable with investment risk | Good fit |
| Already maxing out Cash ISA and S&S ISA | Consider for diversification |
| Higher-rate taxpayer with P2P investments outside ISA | Good fit — significant tax savings |
| Need instant access to money | Poor fit — access can be restricted |
| Can’t afford to lose any capital | Not suitable — use a Cash ISA instead |
| New to investing | Probably not suitable — start with a Stocks and Shares ISA for diversified investing |
Important Considerations
| Factor | Detail |
|---|
| Diversification | Spread across many loans — don’t put all your ISA in one IFISA |
| Platform due diligence | Check the platform is FCA-authorised and has a wind-down plan |
| Auto-invest vs manual | Auto-invest spreads your money automatically; manual lets you choose loans |
| Loan terms | Shorter terms (1–3 years) give more flexibility than longer terms |
| Exit options | Check if there’s a secondary market to sell loans early |
| Maximum ISA allocation | Don’t over-allocate — most of your ISA should be in lower-risk products |
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