Should you play it safe with a Cash ISA or aim for growth with a Stocks and Shares ISA? Here's how to decide based on your goals, timeline, and risk appetite.
Overview
With the ISA deadline fast approaching, one of the most common questions is whether to put your money in a Cash ISA or a Stocks and Shares ISA. Both offer tax-free returns, but they work very differently — and choosing the wrong one could mean missing out on growth or losing money you couldn't afford to risk.
Cash ISA: Safety and Simplicity
A Cash ISA works like a savings account but with tax-free interest. Your capital is protected by the FSCS (up to £85,000 per provider), and you know exactly what rate you're getting. In March 2026, the best easy-access Cash ISAs are paying between 4.4% and 4.7%. Fixed-rate options can offer slightly more if you're willing to lock your money away for a year or two. Cash ISAs are ideal if you need the money within the next 1-3 years — for a house deposit, wedding, or emergency fund.
The Key Factors to Consider
Timeline matters most. Money you need within 3 years should almost always go in cash. Money you won't touch for 5+ years has historically done better in the market. Risk tolerance is personal — if seeing your balance drop 15% would keep you up at night, stocks aren't for you right now. And don't forget fees: many Stocks and Shares ISA platforms charge annual fees of 0.15% to 0.45%, plus fund charges on top, which eat into returns.
Can You Split Your Allowance?
Yes. You can put some of your £20,000 allowance in a Cash ISA and the rest in a Stocks and Shares ISA within the same tax year. This is a sensible approach for many people: keep your emergency fund and short-term savings in cash, and invest the rest for long-term growth. Just make sure the total across all ISA types doesn't exceed £20,000.
The Bottom Line
There's no universally correct answer. If you're saving for something specific in the next few years, cash is king. If you're building long-term wealth and won't need the money for a decade, investing will almost certainly outperform cash over that period. The worst choice is doing nothing and letting your ISA allowance expire. Pick one, fund it, and adjust your strategy next year if needed.
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