Your best bets for instant access savings

Ed Bowsher
by Lovemoney Staff Ed Bowsher on 20 April 2012  |  Comments 8 comments

With inflation edging up again, it's even more important that you get a table-topping instant access account.

Your best bets for instant access savings

Inflation has risen again this month – up from 3.4% to 3.5% - and that means that even fewer savings accounts are offering a return that matches or beats inflation. This is especially true if you want an instant access account.

In fact, there are only two instant access accounts that either beat or match inflation. The inflation beater is the Nationwide BS Flexclusive ISA which pays 4.25% and the minimum deposit is only £1. However, you have to have a Nationwide current account to qualify for this ISA.

If you’re not a Nationwide customer, there’s only one instant access account available that keeps up with rising prices -  Cheshire Building Society’s Direct Cash ISA (Issue 2). It’s paying 3.5% in interest which, of course, is equal to inflation.

The interest rate includes a 2.5% bonus until 31 October 2013, which means you’re guaranteed to receive at least 2.5% for the next 18 months. As the account is a Cash ISA, you won’t have to pay any tax on the interest either.

This year’s Cash ISA allowance is £5,640, so savers with a modest nest egg could put all their cash into the Cheshire account and know they could access it at any point without  notice.

However, richer folk may prefer to use their allowance for Cash ISAs for higher-paying accounts that require notice for withdrawals. Or they might want to put all their ISA money into Stocks and Shares ISAs.

That’s fair enough, but they should still have some instant access cash and that will have to go into a conventional savings account with no tax-free ISA wrapper.

Conventional savings accounts

So which are the best conventional instant access accounts?

Well, the highest-paying account is the Nationwide MySave Online Plus which pays 3.17% in interest. Only trouble is, you need to have a minimum deposit of £25,000 to get that rate, so it’s not feasible for most of us.

Next up is the Coventry Building Society’s Online Saver 2 account which pays 3.15%. This includes a 1.15% bonus which will last for a year, and the minimum deposit is a nice and low £1. The only drawback is that you can only make four penalty-free withdrawals each year, so you could argue that it’s not a true instant access account.

So you may prefer the ING Direct Savings Account as you can make as many withdrawals as you like. At 3.1%, the rate is slightly lower than Coventry’s account, but the bonus is higher at 2.56%. That means you have a higher guaranteed rate with ING than with Coventry.

Top instant access accounts

Account

AER

Minimum Deposit

Withdrawal limits

Nationwide MySave Online Plus

3.17% (includes bonus of 1.62%)

£25,000

Only one free withdrawal each year. Further withdrawals will attract an interest penaly.

Coventry BS Online Saver

3.15% (includes 1.15% bonus for first year)

£1

Four penalty-free withdrawals a year

ING Direct Savings Account

3.1% (includes a 2.56% bonus, fixed for 12 months)

£1

Unlimited

Just remember that none of these accounts will enable you to keep up with inflation – especially once you’ve taken tax into account.

If you’re a basic rate taxpayer and you put your money into the ING Direct savings account, you’ll only get a 2.48% return after tax. If you’re a 40% taxpayer, you’ll only get a 1.86% return.

Or to put it another way, if you’re a basic rate taxpayer and you want a post-tax-return that matches inflation, you’ll need to find a savings account that pays 4.38% in interest. And if you’re a 40% taxpayer, you’ll need to find an account that pays 5.83%!

It’s pretty much impossible to get a 5.83% return from a savings account at the moment. If you need that high a rate, you have two options:

-          Check out the social lending sites such as Zopa and Ratesetter where you could potentially earn 6% or more. Read more here

or 

-          Save via a regular savings account. First direct’s Regular Saver account pays 8%, but you have to pay in your money month-by-month, and the maximum monthly deposit is £300. This doesn’t make sense if you have a lump sum to play with.

However, if you’re a basic rate taxpayer, you can beat 4.38% with a five-year fixed rate bond. For example, AA’s 5-year fixed rate savings account is paying 4.6% interest. That rate won’t change at all during the term but if you want to withdraw early, you’ll suffer.

So that’s a round-up of the top instant access savings accounts plus a few others. Let’s just hope that inflation reverses direction next month and starts to fall again. Lower inflation is great news for savers!

Regular savers:  earn 8% on your savings with no risk

Investec High 5 and High 10 savings accounts will ALWAYS be competitive!

 

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Comments (8)

  • fortitude24
    Love rating 17
    fortitude24 said

    Are there similar accounts for Company Deposits? instant, 7 days, 30 days! for private limited Companies. My bank Lloyds only offers 0.5% but I am not a Government to afford giving QE at that rate

    Report on 24 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • mikecunliffe
    Love rating 22
    mikecunliffe said

    My wife and I have a Nat West e-ISA each - had it for about three years so there's a reasonable amount in each.

    Natwest wrote a couple of days ago to inform us that the rate is dropping - by a reasonable amount as well. I contacted them to see if I could move both ISA's to their new e-ISA account - this is designed to attract NEW customers and hence pays a better rate than even our old ISA's pay BEFORE the imminent cut in the rate.

    Guess what? I cannot move.

    I'd need to move away from the Natwest completely, open a isa with some other provider - ensuring of course they accept transfers. Then, close my e-ISA with the Natwest. Then, move from the new supplier back to Natwest wherein I'm treated as a new customer and WOULD get the higher e-ISA rate.

    It's a mad world.

    My official complaint to the Natwest to resolve this is falling on deaf ears. Hester, with a wave of his riding crop could solve this problem..........if the will existed.

    Banks seem to value new customers more than loyal, existing customers.

    Lloyds have a 2 year fixed ISA that I found directly as a result of Natwest forcing me to look for a temporary bridge isa. As I own Lloyds shares this is a benefit for me. If you hold Natwest (RBS) shares TOUGH your profits will be slightly lower as a result of our migration.

    Report on 24 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • RMN05
    Love rating 11
    RMN05 said

    mikecunliffe - did you not come across BMsavings 2 year fixed rate ISA (Birmingham Midshires) 4.05 % fixed as opposed to Lloyds' 3.7%. ? As a Lloyds' shareholder you'd have still maintained your loyalty. BM Savings is part of Bank of Scotland/HBOS which of course was all acquired by Lloyds in its rather questionable takeover after the Halifax shambles, which well and truly knackered the interests of Lloyds/TSB shareholders, including both you & I. BM's rate seems the best going for a middling fixed period, so me & missus were encouraged to go for it and taken all our other ISAs with us at the expense of Britannia, Barclays, Santander (and Halifax), which frankly had all let their rates dive for existing savers.

    Report on 24 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • mikecunliffe
    Love rating 22
    mikecunliffe said

    thanks RMN05. Didn't spot the BMsavings offering. Have not yet moved the ISA's so your help is timely.

    Thanks.

    Report on 24 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • ashlyn
    Love rating 0
    ashlyn said

    My daughter is currently living and working in Dubai. She has a nationwide a/c and will shortly recieive a small inheritance. Can she open a savings a/c here and not pay tax?

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Sphex
    Love rating 5
    Sphex said

    Before racing off to switch accounts, bear in mind that 0.1% difference in annual interest is only worth £8/year on a £10,000 savings pot, after basic rate tax. Could you have earned more than £8 in the time it took to read the T&C, apply for the account / make the transfer - and repeat the whole process 12 months later?

    Unfortunately, we who have savings are the ones destined to pay the government's bills. When you ultimately spend them you will pay VAT - so HMG has already taken another 2.5% of your pot. Inflation will continue above the level of savings rates for some time to come, and the loss in value of our savings will fuel an illusion of growth to fund the deficit.

    Illusion is the name of the game. Where did all that bail-out money and quantitative easing go? We aren't seeing it in business and enterprise. But something has pumped up the stock market bubble close to its pre-2008 size, conveniently for bankers bonuses and profit sheets. At least that has eased the pressure a little for the pension funds, for the moment.

    Report on 30 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  3 loves
  • johnmxn3
    Love rating 17
    johnmxn3 said

    Ashlyn

    To open the Nationwide FlexISA she would need to go into a Nationwide Branch in person.

    Report on 07 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Ganiyuokesola
    Love rating 0
    Ganiyuokesola said

    I need help

    Report on 07 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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