Savings Accounts UK 2026/27 — Easy Access, Notice, Fixed Rate and Premium Bonds Guide

Best Notice Savings Accounts 2026 — Higher Rates for Patient Savers

Compare the best notice savings accounts in the UK for 2026 — 30-day, 60-day, 90-day, and 120-day notice accounts, how they work, and who they suit.

Savings and investment information is for educational purposes only. The value of investments can go down as well as up. Cash savings up to £85,000 per person per institution are protected by the FSCS.

Notice savings accounts pay higher rates than easy access accounts in exchange for giving advance notice before withdrawing. Here’s how they work and the best rates available.

If you want the wider route through cash savings, notice accounts, Premium Bonds, NS&I, and emergency-fund storage, use the Savings Accounts hub.

How Notice Accounts Work

FeatureDetail
What is it?A savings account where you give advance notice before withdrawing
Notice periodsTypically 30, 60, 90, or 120 days
Interest rateHigher than easy access; lower than most fixed bonds
FSCS protected?Yes — up to £85,000 per banking group
Can you add money?Usually yes — deposits are unrestricted
WithdrawalGive notice → wait the required period → money released
Early withdrawal penaltyUsually loss of interest for the notice period

Notice Accounts vs Other Savings

Account typeAccessTypical rate (2026)Best for
Easy accessInstant4.0%–4.5%Emergency fund, short-term savings
30-day notice30 days4.3%–4.7%Savings you rarely need
60-day notice60 days4.4%–4.8%Medium-term savings
90-day notice90 days4.5%–5.0%Savings you won’t need for months
120-day notice120 days4.5%–5.1%Patient savers wanting the best rate
1-year fixed bond12 months (locked)4.5%–5.2%Money you won’t need for a year
2-year fixed bond24 months (locked)4.3%–5.0%Locking in rates for longer

Rates are indicative and change frequently. Always check current rates.

Choosing the Right Notice Period

Notice periodRate boost over easy accessGood for
30 daysSmall (0.2%–0.5%)People who want a slightly better rate with minimal restriction
60 daysModerate (0.3%–0.6%)Savings earmarked for a known expense in 3+ months
90 daysGood (0.4%–0.8%)Savings you’re confident you won’t need for 3+ months
120 daysBest (0.5%–1.0%)Patient savers comfortable with a 4-month wait

What to Check Before Opening

FactorWhy it matters
AER (Annual Equivalent Rate)The true annual rate including compounding — use this to compare
Notice periodLonger notice = better rate, but less flexibility
Interest payment frequencyMonthly or annual? Monthly is better for compounding
Early withdrawal penaltyWhat happens if you need the money before the notice period?
Minimum depositSome accounts require £1,000+ to open
Maximum balanceSome accounts cap the balance (e.g. £250,000 or £1 million)
Online/app managementCan you give notice and manage the account digitally?
FSCS protectionIs the provider UK-regulated and FSCS-protected?

How to Give Notice

StepWhat to do
1Log in to your account (online/app/phone)
2Request a withdrawal (specifying the amount)
3The notice period starts from the next working day
4Interest continues to be paid during the notice period
5Money is released to your nominated account on the notice date

Strategy: Laddering Notice Accounts

You can stagger your notice periods to always have money becoming available:

MonthAction
JanuaryPut £5,000 in 90-day notice account
FebruaryPut £5,000 in 90-day notice account
MarchPut £5,000 in 90-day notice account
AprilFirst £5,000 available (from January deposit notice given in January)
MaySecond £5,000 available
JuneThird £5,000 available

By giving notice on a rolling basis, you always have money coming available within 30 days while earning the higher 90-day rate.

Tax on Savings Interest

Tax statusPersonal Savings Allowance
Basic rate taxpayer (20%)£1,000 of interest per year tax-free
Higher rate taxpayer (40%)£500 of interest per year tax-free
Additional rate taxpayer (45%)£0 — no allowance
Non-taxpayer (under £12,570 income)£5,000 starting rate for savings + PSA

Example: Do You Need a Cash ISA?

Savings amountInterest rateAnnual interestPSA (basic rate)Tax to pay?
£10,0004.5%£450£1,000No
£20,0004.5%£900£1,000No
£25,0004.5%£1,125£1,000Yes — tax on £125
£30,0004.5%£1,350£1,000Yes — tax on £350

If your total savings interest is under £1,000 (basic rate), a non-ISA notice account with a better rate may beat a Cash ISA.

Who Notice Accounts Suit

SituationSuitable?
Emergency fundNo — use easy access for emergencies
Saving for a holiday in 6+ monthsYes — give notice when you know the date
Medium-term savings (1–3 years)Yes — better rate than easy access
Monthly saving from salaryNot ideal — regular savers often have better rates
Lump sum you don’t need soonYes — ideal use case
Saving for a house depositConsider fixed bond too — if you know the timeline

Sources

  1. Bank of England — Interest rates
  2. FSCS — Deposit protection