Scottish Daily Mail

The true cost of saving with a High St bank

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

SAVERS are losing out on up to £7 billion in interest rewards by sticking with the big banks.

While smaller banks and building societies have been tentativel­y raising rates, big banks continue to pay virtually no interest at all.

Yet money has been pouring into the latter as savers have put more money aside for an uncertain future.

They now need a £50,000 deposit to find an account with a High Street bank that won’t see their savings eroded by inflation, despite it hitting a four-year low last week.

Earlier this month, banking trade body UK Finance revealed that the amount in easyaccess accounts soared by 6pc in the second quarter of the year, the biggest increase since its records began ten years ago.

In the first six months of this year, savers piled in a huge £55.9 billion.

The big banks — including NatWest, Lloyds, Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland, HSBC, Halifax and Santander — hold a total of £726 billion of our savings in easy-access accounts. They pay interest at a rate that is barely above zero, at 0.01 pc to loyal savers — or 10p a year on £1,000.

By switching to better deals at 0.75 pc to 1 pc,

Britain’s savers as a whole can boost their interest by up to £7 billion.

Savers with the big banks are also losing the spending power of their money, even though inflation is now running at its lowest level for nearly five years.

Meanwhile, the rise in the cost of living is increasing at just 0.2pc, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index.

None of the big banks even get near to matching this low inflation rate — unless you have £50,000 in the NatWest Premium Account or open a new Digital Regular Saver. It cut the rate on its Premium account from 0.35pc to 0.2pc last month on sums between £50,000 and £1million. On lesser amounts the rate is 0.01 pc.

The new Digital Saver, open only to those with a current account with the bank, pays 3 pc and gives easy access to your money. But you can only put in a maximum of £50 a month.

It is important you earn more than inflation on your money — if you don’t, it loses its value. With inflation at 0.2 pc, you need to earn £20 interest a year on each £10,000 of savings. At 0.01 pc, you earn just £1, so effectivel­y lose £19 a year.

But data analyst Moneyfacts says there are 81 easy-access accounts on offer from other banks and building societies that beat the rate of inflation.

Rachel Springall, finance expert at Moneyfacts, says: ‘In my view, savers would be wise to look away from the High Street banks as they are paying next to nothing in interest. Challenger brands offer some of the best returns and are worth considerin­g, even if they are not household names.’

Some big banks pay a marginally higher 0.05 pc, but the rate only lasts for a year.

For example, Santander’s eSaver Issue 18 pays 0.05pc, but only for the first 12 months. After that, your money is transferre­d into its Everyday Saver account at 0.01 pc. In contrast, Principali­ty BS has just upped the rate on its Web Saver account for new savers to 0.8 pc while Yorkshire BS Internet Plus Saver 7 pays 0.95pc as long as you have £10,000 in the account. All give you easy access to your money with no withdrawal restrictio­ns. Your money — up to £85,000 — is covered by the Financial Services Compensati­on Scheme, so you won’t lose out if the bank or building society runs into trouble.

Savers looking to put money aside each month can earn 1 pc on their future savings.

Virgin Money Regular E-Saver pays 1 pc and lets you make withdrawal­s any time, but limits you to saving £250 a month.

Unlike the new NatWest Digital Regular Saver, the account is open to all and not just its existing current account holders. The Virgin account rate is fixed for a year while NatWest reserves the right to cut the rate at any time.

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