Cash ISA Allowance Cut: What Savers Need to Know

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is reportedly planning to slash the cash ISA allowance in a bid to encourage more investment in UK markets. However, existing cash ISA holders can breathe easy—any changes won’t affect money already saved in these tax-free accounts.

What’s Changing?
Currently, savers can deposit up to £20,000 per year into an ISA (either cash or stocks & shares). The government is considering:

Reducing the cash ISA allowance (potentially to £4,000)

Keeping the stocks & shares ISA limit at £20,000

No retrospective changes – existing savings remain protected

Why the Cut?
The move aims to boost investment culture in the UK by steering savers towards stocks & shares ISAs, which fuel economic growth. However, critics argue it could hurt those who rely on cash savings for security.

What This Means for Savers
✅ Existing cash ISA funds stay protected – No changes to money already saved.
✅ Interest remains tax-free – Even if the allowance drops, current savings continue growing tax-free.
❌ Future deposits may be restricted – New limits could apply from as early as next tax year.

Example Scenario
A saver with £100,000 in cash ISAs earning 4% interest gets £4,000/year tax-free.

Without the ISA, they’d pay £600 (basic rate) or £1,400 (higher rate) in tax on that interest.

Industry Reaction
Rosie Hooper (Quilter Cheviot):

“It’s positive that existing savings won’t be touched. Retrospective changes would’ve been unfair and chaotic.”

Craig Rickman (interactive investor):

*”The government is right to avoid mid-year changes. Past adjustments, like the 2014-15 hike, caused confusion.”*

Over 50 financial firms have urged Reeves to keep the £20,000 limit, calling cash ISAs a “cornerstone of UK savings”.

What’s Next?
The Treasury has hinted at balancing savers’ security with economic growth, stating:

“We want savings to deliver the best returns while boosting UK investment.”

For more details, check:

BBC News on ISA reforms

Financial Times savings analysis