Daily Mail

Millions now face tax on their nest egg for the first time in seven years

- By Sylvia Morris sy.morris@dailymail.co.uk

Savers will have to pay tax on their savings interest for the first time in nearly seven years. rising interest rates mean earnings from savings accounts could soar by hundreds of pounds this year.

This means millions of basicrate taxpayers could bust their £1,000 personal savings allowance for the first time since its introducti­on in april 2016.

at the same time, income tax thresholds have been frozen until april 2028. so those who get a pay rise could be dragged up from the 20 pc basic-rate tax bracket to the higher 40 pc rate.

as a result, their personal savings allowance will halve to £500 and any interest they earn above this level will be liable for tax.

Tax changes in this month’s budget are also expected to take some 232,000 taxpayers into the 45 pc additional rate tax bracket. They will receive no concession­s at all on their savings interest.

Basic-rate tax starts when your income hits £12,571. You’ll pay the higher 40 pc rate once your income reaches £ 50,271 and the additional 45 pc rate will kick in at £125,140 from april 2023. This was reduced from £150,000 in the Budget earlier this month.

The personal savings allowance gives around 27.2 million basic-rate taxpayers the first £1,000 they earn each year from an ordinary savings account tax-free.

The 5.5 million higherrate taxpayers have an allowance of £ 500, while the 629,000 additional rate payers don’t get anything. The allowance has not risen since it was introduced.

Laura suter, head of personal finance at investment platform aJ Bell, says: ‘Income tax allowances have been frozen, so more people are being pushed into the next tax bracket and seeing their personal savings allowance cut or disappear altogether.’

Part of the reason more people are at risk of paying tax is because the amount of money invested in taxable savings accounts has soared since then — by 47 pc to £1.167 trillion. Years of low interest rates have meant savers didn’t have much chance of using their tax-free allowance. But with better rates and increased savings, that is set to change. sarah Coles, a personal finance analyst at investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown, says: ‘ Now that interest rates are higher, if you put more cash on deposit, there’s an everincrea­sing chance that you’ll breach the allowance.’

Last year, the best easy-access account paid around 0.5 pc. as a basic-rate taxpayer, you could have £200,000 in your account and not earn enough interest to breach the personal savings allowance. For higher-rate payers, the sum was £100,000.

Now, with the best rate at 2.81 pc, the sums have dropped to around a sixth of these levels, at £35,587 and £17,793 respective­ly.

Latest figures from HM revenue and Customs show that in the year to april 2020, 13.9 million taxpayers received interest on their savings with banks and building societies.

WHAT SHOULD SAVERS DO?

Look to use your Isa tax-free allowance. once the darling of the savings world, cash Isas fell out of favour thanks to persistent low interest rates and the arrival of the personal savings allowance.

Isas work in the same way as an ordinary account, but all your interest is automatica­lly tax free. Nor does it count towards your income when working out the level of income tax you have to pay.

You can save £20,000 each tax year — which runs from april 6 one year to april 5 the next.

Top rates include 2.5 pc from scottish Bs and Cynergy Bank on easy-access accounts.

If you pay tax, this is a better rate than earning a slightly higher 2.81 pc in a non-Isa account.

after basic rate tax at 20 pc, that works out at 2.24 pc or 1.68 pc for a higher-rate payer.

The top one-year fixed-rate Isa is 3.78 pc from shawbrook Bank, while the best bond is 4.35 pc from atom or GB Bank.

The latter will be worth 3.4 8pc after tax to a basic-rate payer and 2.6 1pc to someone who pays higher-rate tax.

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