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NatWest pulls top instant access savings account


Updated on 08 November 2012 | 6 Comments

As the top easy access savings account disappears, and rates across the board plunge, is there any point in an easy access account?

Blink and you miss it; a little over a week ago NatWest launched a market-leading easy access savings account paying 2.85%. Sadly this competitive rate was short-lived and has now been dropped, just over a week after launch, to a paltry 1.0%.

It wasn't alone, as other accounts at the top of the best buy tables a week ago have been cut or withdrawn.

The Derbyshire NetSave Issue 6 paying 2.75% has been replaced with Issue 7 which pays a much smaller 2.5%. The same reduction has been implemented by Nationwide Building Society with its My Save Online Plus. Skipton Building Society’s Online Bonus Saver that paid 2.60% has been withdrawn. And most recently the ING Direct Savings Account has taken another cut from 2.50% to just 2%.

The most recent changes have left savers with very little variety when it comes to easy access savings accounts.

Here’s a roundup of the only decent rates I could find out there at the moment.

Top instant access accounts available now

Account

Interest Rate Gross AER

Minimum deposit

Withdrawal limits

Access

Bonus

West Brom BS WeBSave Easy Access 5

2.52%

£10,000

Four withdrawals allowed per year

Online

Rate includes a 1.0% bonus fixed until December 2013

Allied Irish Bank (GB) Easy Access Account Issue 3

2.50%

£1

None

Post or phone

None

 Saffron BS E-Saver Issue 6

2.50%

 £10

 None

 Online

 None

Derbyshire BS Derbyshire NetSaver Issue 7

2.50%

£1,000

None

Online

Rate includes a 1.50% bonus fixed until February 2014

Nationwide BS
MySave Online Plus

2.50%

£1,000

One free withdrawal per year

Online

Rate includes a bonus of 0.97% fixed for 12 months

 

 

Tesco Internet Saver Account

2.40%

£1

None

Online

Rate includes a 1.15% bonus fixed for 12 months

Post Office Online Saver

2.35%

£1

None

Online

Rate includes a 0.70% bonus fixed for 12 months

Newcastle BS Sir Bobby Robson Foundation Saver Issue 2

2.35%

£1

None

Online

None

Principality e-Saver Issue 8

2.30%

£1

None

Online

None

Aldermore Easy Access Issue 4

2.25%

£1,000

None

Online, phone or post

None

West Bromwich Building Society’s WeBSave Easy Access 5 which pays 2.52% is the new table topper. But the headline rate is only available if you have £10,000 to open the account.

With research from HSBC recently revealing that eight million UK households have less than £250 put away, this particular account is not going to help the large number of savers with modest pots.

Allied Irish has the most reasonable proposition after West Brom with an account only needing a £1 deposit to get access to a rate of 2.50%. That said the rate can be found with a variety of banks and building societies at the moment so isn’t exactly special.

So where else can savers go?

Notice accounts

If you’re prepared to give up some access the rates do improve and they aren’t all in fixed rate bonds - notice accounts are looking very attractive at the moment. Here are five that look particularly juicy.

Account

Interest Rate Gross AER

Minimum deposit

Notice

Access

Bonus

Post Office Reward Saver

3.00%

£500

30 days

Branch, post, phone

Rate includes 1.25% bonus fixed for 12 months

Hanley Economic BS Postal 180 Day Notice- Issue 2

2.75%

£5,000

180 days

Post

None

Aldermore 60 Day Notice Issue 2

2.70%

£1,000

60 days

Online, phone or post

None

Hinckley & Rugby BS 90 Day Notice Postal Account

2.65%

£2,500

90 days

Post

None

Bath BS Direct 60 Issue 5

2.60%

£2,500

60 days

Post or online

None

Overall the rates on offer here are much better than what can be found with an easy access savings account at the moment. I like to think of notice accounts as the middle ground between easy access and fixed rate bonds - where you give up a little access and flexibility to get a better rate. Sometimes the rates between the two don't differ too much, but currently the better deals are plain to see.

The Post Office offers a cracking 3.0% for a reasonable £500 investment. What’s even better is that the notice period isn’t too long - all you need to provide is 30 days’ warning in order to get access to your cash.

This short timeframe isn't always the case though. Hanley Economic Building Society provides a good rate of 2.75%, but you have to give a whopping six months’ notice if you want to make a withdrawal. You’re able to access money without notice, but this incurs a penalty loss of 180 days' interest.

What about peer to peer?

You may have also heard of peer-to-peer savings. It’s a type of investment that cuts out the banks to get you access to higher rates by giving you the opportunity to lend your money directly to businesses or individuals needing a loan.

Usually peer-to-peer savings run across one- to five-year terms, but RateSetter has a monthly scheme, which offers a current market rate of 3.1% - including fees and bad debt.

You can start lending from as little as £10 and access the whole sum of your cash plus the interest at the end of the month or roll it over to keep it invested.

lovemoney.com editor John Fitzsimons is testing the monthly savings option out. Read: Why I've started saving with RateSetter to see how he gets on.

The wild card

One account that could leave you better off is Buckinghamshire Building Society’s Chiltern Gold Escalator which builds to a rate of 4.0% over a year providing an AER of 2.85% in the first year.

This account is not traditionally easy access, because if you touch the pot you have to start building the rate again. But you can if you need to with little penalty apart from a rate drop.

If you like the sound of it check out this story:  Buckinghamshire launches savings accounts with rising interest rates.

More on savings:

Funding Circle offers investors 1% cashback and iPad Mini

Asda shoppers could earn 12.9% interest on their savings

M&S Bank offers regular saver account paying 6%

Why Nationwide's instant access Loyalty Saver account is rubbish

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Comments



  • 16 November 2012

    Banks etc. love'em or hate'em. I despise every one of them. Blood pressure starts going up every time little Mervyn King appears on the telly wringing his hands, wondering what to do next, urging us all little people to suffer more and spend what's left of our savings to prop up the economy. Who got us in the mess in the first place? Quantitative easing? give me a bit of it. Low interest rates are crucifying pensioners and will never forgive BoE and Gordon Brown. Low interest rates benefit people who don't deserve propping up. Spend more? What on? More cheap Chinese junk and all the other imported stuff we rely on since pulling the plug on UK manufacturing. The people who exhort you spend will never know what living off savings is like - the likes of Mervyn King - sorry Sir - don't even buy their own lunches. Pity the Greek and Spanish populations, I hope they kick the crap out of their governments - at least they have the guts to do it - all strength to them. Incidentally, CYBERBABE, I did manage to get the Natwest 2.8% rate, but only after kicking up. I did all the right things after they put it up on their website. Applied online as an existing customer, so they had all my details. They still had to send me a confirmation form to sign on second class post, which I duly returned, by return. When I inquired about the interest rate, it was "sorry sir, your application was received too late"As far as as was concerned, applying online was applying online and after a bit of argy bargy, the bonus rate of 1.8% was added. For what it's worth, don't bother trying Allied Irish Bank either. I applied for their 2.5% easy access only to have the cheque returned with a letter saying that they had withdrawn the account. I used to trust AIB or Anglo Irish, but not any more.

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  • 08 November 2012

    I wonder if anyone managed to get Nat West's higher rate? I applied as soon as it came out but by the time I got the details 2 weeks later it had gone down to 1% that seems like a con to me!

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  • 06 November 2012

    I think fenemore's and george19a's posts are both spot-on, and like them I also come from the era when life's important commitments came first, to the point where there was sense in making the effort to pay the mortgage off early, (which we accomplished 5 years early). Consequently, we are now savers gaining little recompense from thrift. This is one area where those in control of macro money policies have got it so wrong. If they think that we savers will give up the habit and spend, spend spend rather than endure measly savings income so that we will rescue the consumer economy for them, then their philosophy entirely overlooks our generation's lifetime of sensible money management. Wild horses (and paltry savings income) will not drag us into consuming unnecessarily. Those of us who still have a reasonable amount of life expectancy will still save for when our later life needs will impose a need to draw on savings, rather than rescue the economy that has been so impaired by the finance world's profligate young turks.

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