With savings rates in the UK at their highest in over a decade, more people are earning enough interest on their savings to have a tax liability. The system is more nuanced than many realise: there are multiple layers of allowances that can stack to allow you to earn significant amounts of interest completely tax-free. Understanding them can save you hundreds of pounds.
The Personal Savings Allowance (PSA)
- •Basic rate taxpayer: £1,000 interest tax-free per year
- •Higher rate taxpayer: £500 interest tax-free per year
- •Additional rate taxpayer: no PSA (all savings interest taxed)
- •At 5% interest: basic rate taxpayer can hold ~£20,000 before tax
- •PSA applies to savings outside ISAs
The Starting Rate for Savings
- •Full starting rate: £5,000 of savings interest taxed at 0%
- •Available when non-savings income is under £17,570
- •Reduces £1 for every £1 of income above £12,570
- •Zero remaining starting rate: when non-savings income exceeds £17,570
- •Useful for: low earners, those with no/low employment income
Combining Allowances: Maximum Tax-Free Interest
- •Low earner: Personal allowance + starting rate + PSA = £6,000 interest tax-free
- •Basic rate taxpayer: PSA = £1,000 interest tax-free (outside ISA)
- •Plus: ISA interest is always tax-free, unlimited
- •Strategy: fill ISA first, then use PSA capacity for non-ISA savings
- •Non-taxpayers: report zero tax on interest via self-assessment or R85 form
How Tax on Savings Is Collected
- •Banks report interest to HMRC automatically
- •HMRC adjusts tax code if you owe tax on interest
- •Self-assessment: declare all non-ISA savings interest
- •ISA interest: never reported, always tax-free
- •Reclaim overpaid tax: form R40 (non-self-assessment taxpayers)
Do I need to tell HMRC about my savings interest?+
If your savings interest plus other income exceeds your allowances, HMRC should adjust your tax code automatically. If you do self-assessment, include savings interest on your return. Contact HMRC if you're unsure.
Is Premium Bond income taxable?+
No. Premium Bond prizes are completely tax-free and don't count towards your PSA. They're a separate category altogether.
Do joint savings accounts split interest between partners?+
Yes. Interest on joint accounts is normally split 50/50 between partners and each person uses their own PSA. This means a couple with a joint account gets £1,500 combined PSA.
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