Earn 5.15% on easy access savings

Earn a fantastic rate on your savings with this clever trick.
Most savers take out cash ISAs in the run up to the end of the tax year deadline on 5 April. This April you may not have been so keen to sign up because many cash ISAs offered rates which trailed ordinary taxable savings accounts. And, even though those rates were tax-free, it probably wasn’t enough to tempt you to hand over your cash.
But if your ISA allowance still remains unused, I’ve got a new deal for you this week which might just do the trick. It’s the new Cash ISA Direct Reward from Halifax, and it has stormed into the lead of the cash ISA best buys with a rate of 2.8% tax-free.
If you take out a Halifax current account (or if you're already a Halifax current account customer) and you fund your account with £1,000 or more each month, you’ll enjoy a loyalty reward of 0.2%, pushing the rate up even higher to 3%, tax-free.*
This top rate now beats the best account the easy access savings market has to offer. After all, the top account - the AA Internet Extra - only offers a taxable rate of 2.8%. So this generates a return of just 2.24% in the hands of a basic rate taxpayer and 1.68% for a higher rate taxpayer once tax has been deducted.
Cash ISA Direct Reward key features
This new market-leading cash ISA is available to new and existing customers alike. The account offers penalty-free easy access whenever you need it without notice, and can be opened with as little as £1.
The variable rate will effectively apply for a period of 12 months. After this time, Halifax will contact you with the option to review your ISA to ensure you have the best deal. Don’t forget, ISA accounts across the whole market will be open to you, so don’t take the new rate Halifax offers you unless it’s highly competitive. If the rollover account doesn’t measure up, you have every right to transfer your ISA money elsewhere.
Find out how to become a smart saver with a Cash ISA, and enjoy totally tax-free return.
And, of course, if the Halifax rate falls during the 12-month period, you can switch to the new market-leader as soon as it comes onto the market as long as ISA transfers are accepted.
On the subject of transfers, the Halifax Cash ISA Direct Reward also accepts transfers in from other ISA accounts. So that means, if you have old ISAs from previous tax years which are now earning poor rates, you can take advantage of this top return by moving them over the Halifax. In this way, you can make sure all your tax-free savings are generating the best possible rate.
Plus you may find it easier to have all your ISAs in one place.
Bump up your return
The Halifax ISA certainly offers a competitive rate given that the average cash ISA pays just 2.15%, according to lovemoney.com partner Moneyfacts. But even if a rate of 2.8% to 3% tax-free fails to whet your appetite, you can bump up your return to more than 5%. Here’s how…
If you don’t already have a Halifax current account and you’re prepared to switch, you can qualify for the higher ISA rate by choosing a qualifying Halifax account. The Halifax Reward account would be a good choice here. As long as you fund it with £1000 plus every month, you’ll earn a £5 monthly reward. This even applies if your account goes overdrawn.
On top of that £60 a year, you’ll also receive a £50 cash bonus when you switch. So taking the ISA rate and monthly rewards into account, and assuming you use the full cash ISA allowance of £5,100, here’s a summary of the total return you could earn over the next 12 months:
Market-leading returns
Cashback, rewards and interest |
Totals |
Switching cashback |
£50 |
Rewards earned over the year |
£60 |
Annual interest earned @ 3% on ISA savings of £5,100 |
£153 |
Total earned over the year |
£263 |
As the table shows, if you squirrel away £5,100 into your ISA, and payin at least £1,000 of your salary every month into the Reward account, then you’ll earn £263 after a year. That’s equivalent to a rate of 5.15%.
Recent question on this topic
- bellwater asks:
Can a cash ISA account become dormant?
- manzanilla answered "Well obviously your has :) A dormant accpunt is one where the bank has had no contact with the..."
- MikeGG1 answered "New rules throughout the industry mean that accounts are becoming dormant after only about 3..."
- Read more answers
To earn a return that good in an ordinary taxable savings account, basic rate taxpayers would need a rate of at least 6.44%, while higher rate taxpayers need 8.58% and additional rate taxpayers need 10.30%. I don’t think I need to tell how impossible this would be to achieve anywhere else in today’s savings market.
On the other hand, if you’re quite happy to leave your current account where it is, you’ll earn the lower rate of 2.80%, which generates a return of £142.80 over the year.
Whichever route you decide to take, bear in mind that using up your ISA allowance sooner rather than later always makes good financial sense so you can start earning a tax-free return at the earliest opportunity. And now that ISA rates are improving, it’s an even more savvy move.
*You'll also earn this extra rate if you hold an Ultimate Reward Current Account, but this account costs £12.50 a month so may not be worth getting for the extra rate.
Compare ISAs, savings accounts, and current accounts at lovemoney.com
More: Earn 4.25% on your savings tax-free! | How to make money tax-free!
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Comments
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RICHARD of CLEEVE - I would be VERY suspicious of this company. I obviously cannot say for sure that this is a scam, but it sounds VERY dodgy: 1. The company is in Panama, where a LOT of investment scams originate 2. They are NOT registered with the FSA. I believe this makes it illegal for them to cold call UK residents offering financial information, and I guess you would have no legal protection if your money disappears (?) 3. The URL of their website has been registered for less than 12 months, i.e. a relatively new financial company. Boiler rooms always sound very professional on the telephone, and their websites look quite professional also. I wouldn't touch them with a barge pole. You could try asking them why they are not registered with the FSA, how long they have been offering advice for etc etc
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Richard of Cleeve, I think the safest advice is going to be to ignore them. It might be fun to lead them along a bit but be very very careful.
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It is very easy to transfer ISA's aready in existence, all service providers will help. The annoying reality is that current providers neglect to tell you what the current rates are and if they have other products on offer such as Halifax instant saver ISA only pays 0.5% whereas the new ISA direct is paying 2.8%. How much do banks rely on savers inertia.
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30 September 2010