Daily Mail

The £210 penalty if you can’t put savings online

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

SAVERS without internet access are being penalised as the best rates are increasing­ly reserved for online accounts.

You can earn as much as 3.06 pc online, some 0.5 percentage points more than the top branch-based accounts.

The gap widened as smaller banks reacted swiftly to National Savings & Investment­s’ rate boost last week. The Treasury-backed bank now offers 2.85 pc on its internet and telephone-based Direct Saver.

Within hours the newer banks, offering only online or appbased accounts, raised rates.

It can take weeks for big banks and building societies to follow suit. And there is no guarantee they will move the rate they pay on branch-based accounts at all.

Missing out most are older savers. Office for National Statistics figures show just 49 pc of over-65s use internet banking.

As rates rise to their highest for more than a decade, the gap between online and branch accounts is growing.

The average of the top five online accounts is 3.04 pc, up from 0.7 pc in December 2021 when Bank of England base rate started its rapid rise from 0.1 pc to 4 pc today.

The best branch accounts now pay an average 2.5 pc, up from 0.4 pc.

On a £20,000 pot, over a year, a 3.06 pc rate generates £612 in interest compared to £506 on 2.5 pc — a premium of £106 for online users.

Big banks are also keeping those without internet access from the top deals. For example, HSBC offers a 3 pc rate up to £10,000 for those happy to open and run theirs online — but only 0.9 pc if you’re not.

On the top balance, that’s a difference of £210 interest over the year.

Rachel Springall, of financial data firm Moneyfacts, says: ‘The link between base rate and savings rates is much more disconnect­ed now.

‘There is no guarantee savers will benefit from every single rise in base rate. Online banks are keen to attract deposits and offer better rates than High Street competitor­s.’

Top of the online accounts is Shawbrook Easy Access at 3.06 pc, Tandem Instant Access and Sainsbury’s Defined Access, both at 3.05 pc, Cynergy Bank Online Easy Access at 3.04 pc and Gatehouse Bank at 3 pc.

But there are catches. Cynergy has a bonus of 0.15 percentage points and Tandem a 0.25 point bonus for 12 months. After that you earn a lower rate. Sainsbury’s only allows three withdrawal­s a year rather than easy access to your cash.

Shawbrook pays the top rate where there are no catches.

Other online accounts nearing the 3 pc benchmark with no catches are Secure Trust and Atom both at 2.95 pc.

The top branch equivalent is Yorkshire BS’s Access Saver Plus issue 7 at 2.55 pc.

You can earn over 3 pc in branch accounts, too. But it depends on where you live, if you are happy with the account’s restrictio­ns and how fast you can snap up accounts on sale for just a short time.

The Rainy Day Account from Yorkshire BS pays 3.35 pc. But this is only paid on the first £5,000. And withdrawal­s can be made on just two days a year.

Swansea pays 3.25 pc on its Easy Access Account, but you must live in Wales to open one.

Bath Building Society Instant Saver account will pay 3.09 pc from March 1. But you must live or work in the city to open one.

Newbury BS Welcome account pays 3.15 pc but only to new customers on their first £3,000.

Just below the 3 pc benchmark is Skipton Branch Tracker Issue 4 at 2.9 pc on sale through its 87 branches around the country.

Available online and in branches, it guarantees to pay the Bank of England base rate less 1.1 percentage points for two years. But you need to grab this ‘now you see it, now you don’t’ account while you can.

Money Mail does not include easy- access accounts with bonuses or limited withdrawal­s in its best buy tables. But we do inform you of what is on offer.

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