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

Fixed Rate Bonds vs Easy Access Savings UK — Which Is Better?

Should you lock your money in a fixed rate bond or keep it in easy access? Compare the pros, cons, and when each savings account type makes sense.

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.

Easy access or fixed rate? Here’s how to decide where to put your savings.

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

Quick Comparison

FeatureEasy AccessFixed Rate Bond
Interest rateLower (3-4.5%)Higher (4-5%+)
Access to moneyAnytimeLocked for term
Risk of lossNoneNone
Rate guaranteeCan changeFixed for term
Best forEmergency fund, flexible savingsMoney you won’t need
FSCS protectedYes (£85k)Yes (£85k)

Easy Access Savings Explained

What Is Easy Access?

FeatureDetails
WithdrawalAnytime, usually instant
Interest rateVariable (can change)
Minimum usually£1 or low amount
PenaltiesNone

Types of Easy Access

TypeFeatures
Instant access saverAny bank transfer anytime
Limited accesse.g., 3 withdrawals/year
Online onlyOften best rates
High streetConvenient but lower rates

Typical Rates

Account TypeRate Range
High street instant1-3%
Online instant3-4.5%
Limited access3.5-4.5%

Rates change frequently — check current offers.

Best For

SituationWhy Easy Access
Emergency fundMust be accessible
Saving for something soonMight need it
Uncertain needsFlexibility matters
Regular deposits/withdrawalsMoving money around

Fixed Rate Bonds Explained

What Is a Fixed Rate Bond?

FeatureDetails
TermFixed period (1-5 years)
Interest rateLocked for the term
AccessUsually none until maturity
WithdrawalPenalties or not allowed

Common Terms

TermTypical Features
1 yearBest balance of rate and flexibility
2 yearsOften slightly better rate
3 yearsHigher rate, longer commitment
5 yearsHighest rate, long lock-in

Typical Rates

TermRate Range
1 year4-5%
2 years4-4.5%
3 years3.5-4.5%
5 years3.5-4%

Longer term may not always mean higher rate — depends on market.

Early Access Rules

TypeWhat Happens
No early accessMoney completely locked
Penalty accessLose 90-180 days interest
Partial withdrawalSome allow taking some out
Always checkBefore opening

When to Choose Each

Choose Easy Access If

SituationWhy
Emergency fundNon-negotiable — must be accessible
Need money within 1 yearCan’t risk locking it
Uncertain about timelineFlexibility crucial
Rates might riseCan switch to better offers
Multiple savings goalsMoving money around

Choose Fixed Rate If

SituationWhy
Money truly not neededCan lock it away
Rate is significantly betterWorth the commitment
Rates might fallLock in today’s rate
Want guaranteed returnKnow exactly what you’ll get
Saving for specific dateMatch term to goal

Interest Rate Considerations

If Rates Are Rising

ScenarioBest Choice
Rates going upEasy access (can switch)
OrShort fixed terms (1 year)
AvoidLong fixed terms

If Rates Are Falling

ScenarioBest Choice
Rates going downFixed rate (lock in)
OrLonger terms if confident
Easy accessWill earn less over time

Rate Comparison Example

£10,000 for 2 YearsEasy Access (3.5%)Fixed (4.5%)
Year 1 interest£350£450
Year 2 interest£350£450
Total interest£700£900
Difference+£200

The Laddering Strategy

What Is Laddering?

ConceptHow It Works
Split savingsAcross different terms
Some accessibleAlways something maturing
Average out ratesNot all eggs in one basket

Example: £20,000 Ladder

AmountTermMatures
£5,000Easy accessAnytime
£5,0001-year fixedYear 1
£5,0002-year fixedYear 2
£5,0003-year fixedYear 3

Laddering Benefits

BenefitDetails
FlexibilitySome always accessible
Better average rateThan all in easy access
Regular maturityReinvest at current rates
Hedge against rate movesNot all locked at one rate

Notice Accounts: The Middle Ground

What Are Notice Accounts?

FeatureDetails
RateBetween easy access and fixed
AccessGive notice (30-90-180 days)
FlexibilityMore than fixed
ReturnBetter than instant access

When to Use

SituationNotice Account Works
Savings above emergency fundCan wait for access
Want better rateThan easy access
Don’t want full lock-inMore flexible than fixed
Predictable needsCan plan ahead

Tax Considerations

Personal Savings Allowance

Tax BandTax-Free Interest
Basic rate (20%)£1,000/year
Higher rate (40%)£500/year
Additional rate (45%)£0

If Exceeding PSA

OptionBenefit
Cash ISAInterest tax-free
Split between namesUse partner’s allowance
Premium BondsWins tax-free

Example: When Tax Matters

SavingsRateAnnual InterestTax (Higher Rate)
£50,0004%£2,000£500+ taxable
Tax at 40%£2,000 - £500 = £1,500 taxable£600 tax

Consider ISA for larger savings.

Summary: Decision Framework

How to Split Your Savings

Savings BucketBest Account Type
Emergency fund (3-6 months)Easy access only
Money needed within 1 yearEasy access
Money needed in 1-2 yearsShort fixed or notice
Money not needed 2+ yearsFixed rate
Above £85kSpread across banks

Quick Decision

QuestionIf YesIf No
Might need it anytime?Easy accessConsider fixed
Is for emergencies?Easy accessConsider fixed
Fixed rate much higher?Consider fixedEasy access fine
Comfortable locking away?Fixed can workStick with easy

Checklist Before Opening Fixed Rate

CheckWhy
Do I have separate emergency fund?Don’t lock emergency money
Will I definitely not need this?Can’t access early
What are early withdrawal terms?Know the rules
Is the rate significantly better?Worth the commitment
What happens at maturity?Avoid auto-rollover to poor rate

Both account types have their place. Most people need easy access for emergencies, and fixed rates can boost returns on money they truly won’t need. Match the account type to each pot of savings.

You Might Also Find Useful

Sources

  1. Bank of England — Interest rates
  2. FSCS — Deposit protection
  3. UK Debt Management Office — Gilts