Brits with £3,500 or more in savings risk imminent HMRC tax bill

Brits with £3,500 or more in savings risk imminent HMRC tax bill
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Brits with £3,500 or more in savings risk imminent HMRC tax bill
Author: Jessica Lindsay
Published: Feb, 07 2025 11:24

UK savers have been urged to check HMRC rules, as a ‘significant’ portion will soon face tax bills due to rising interest rates. Although you don’t have to pay tax on money you’ve saved, you are taxed on interest earned over a certain amount — and with the financial year ending at the start of April, it won’t be long before letters start landing on doorsteps. What you should expect all depends on the type of account you have and your income tax band.

 [Young Asian women managing home finance using laptop & smartphone. She is working with household utility bill and calculating expenses at home.]
Image Credit: Metro [Young Asian women managing home finance using laptop & smartphone. She is working with household utility bill and calculating expenses at home.]

Basic rate taxpayers – earning £12,571 to £50,270 annually – are allowed to earn £1,000 a year in tax-free interest, with anything above this amount charged at 20%. Meanwhile, the personal savings allowance (PSA) for those on the higher rate – with an income of £50,271 to £125,140 each year – is £500, beyond which a 40% tax is incurred. Then there’s the different type of account: according to Money Saving Expert (MSE), those on the basic rate would need around £20,000 placed in a top easy-access savings account to exceed the allowance at current rates, with the figure for higher rate taxpayers sitting just over £10,000.

However, if you save through a fixed-rate account, which locks your cash away for a set time, the threshold will be far lower. Because you’re taxed on savings interest in the tax year you can access it, if you opt for a fixed-rate savings account longer than a year where the interest is paid at maturity, all the interest is counted towards the final year’s PSA. So, higher rate taxpayers with as little as £3,500 on a three-year fixed rate of 5% will go over their allowance, or roughly £7,000 for anyone on the basic rate.

Your allowance applies to interest from:. Savings in tax-free accounts like Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) and some National Savings and Investments accounts do not count towards your allowance. Visit the UK Government website for more information. Paragon Bank recently revealed 2.4 million fixed term non-ISA savings accounts are set to mature in the next three months, up to 887,000 of which have generated enough interest to incur a tax payment.

Derek Sprawling, the company’s managing director of Savings, advised affected savers look at switching to an ISA variant ”if they don’t already utilise their annual tax-free allowance.’. ‘The upcoming months will be a pivotal time for millions of savers as their fixed-rate accounts mature,’ he added. ‘It’s therefore essential for savers to consider their options carefully to match their current, and future, returns.

Life admin apps to save the day? Brits rely on seven pocket pals for budget control. ‘With a significant portion of these accounts earning rates which were set when underlying reference rates were at their peak and showing signs of upward movement, most maturing savers will, unfortunately, likely not be able to match their previous rate when it comes to an end.’. Do you have a story to share?. Get in touch by emailing MetroLifestyleTeam@Metro.co.uk.

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