Skip to content
International Adviser
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Regions
    • United Kingdom
    • Middle East
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • North America
    • Latin America
  • Industry
    • Tax & Regulation
    • Products
    • Life
    • Health & Protection
    • People Moves
    • Companies
    • Offshore Bonds
    • Retirement
    • Technology
    • Platforms
  • Investment
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Alternatives
    • Multi Asset
    • Property
    • Macro Views
    • Structured Products
    • Emerging Markets
    • Commodities
  • IA 100
  • Best Practice
    • Best Practice News
    • Best Practice Awards
  • Media
    • Video
    • Podcast
  • Directory
  • My IA
    • Events
    • IA Tax Panel
    • IA Intermediary Panel
    • About IA

ANNOUNCEMENT: Read more financial articles on our partner site, click here to read more.

Cash ISA allowance expected to be cut to £12k in Budget

By Laura Purkess, 25 Nov 25

The government is hoping the move will push more people to invest in stocks and shares ISAs

UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves is reportedly set to slash the annual cash ISA allowance to £12,000 in tomorrow’s Budget, according to reports.

The government is hoping the move will push more people to invest in stocks and shares ISAs instead of cash ISAs, which could boost the UK economy. According to HMRC, around 15 million adult ISAs were subscribed to ISAs in 2023/24 – just under 10 million of which were cash ISAs.

However, experts have repeatedly warned that they don’t expect cutting the cash ISA allowance will see a sizeable shift towards investing, and research suggests that most typical UK savers would opt to save into a taxable account over investing their money through a stocks and shares ISA.

Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown, said:“We need an investment culture in the UK, and some of the money that has been saved in cash ISAs would work harder for people if it was invested instead, but there’s no evidence that cutting the cash ISA allowance would encourage them to make the change.

“When Hargreaves Lansdown surveyed clients as to what they would do in the event of a cut, they were equally likely to say a cut in the allowance would mean saving elsewhere as they were to say they would invest instead.”

The chancellor is widely expected to announce a raft of other tax tweaks to attempt to plug a multi-billion-pound black hole in the public purse.

Share this article
Follow by Email
Facebook
fb-share-icon
X (Twitter)
Post on X
LinkedIn
Share

Related Stories

  • Industry

    UK government refuses to commit to ‘pensions tax lock’

    Beautiful Plaza de Espan, Seville, Andalusia

    Europe

    Skybound Wealth expands into Spain with new office

  • How to save the pan European pension dream

    Latest news

    IFGL Pensions connects to Pensions Dashboard

    Companies

    Rose St Louis to leave Scottish Widows in March 2026


NEWSLETTER

Sign Up for International
Adviser Daily Newsletter

subscribe

  • View site map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

Published by Money Map Media – part of G&M Media Ltd Copyright (c) 2024.

International Adviser covers the global intermediary market that uses cross-border insurance, investments, banking and pension products on behalf of their high-net-worth clients. No news, articles or content may be reproduced in part or in full without express permission of International Adviser.