Six months until Help to Buy ISA ends – where are all the LISA providers?

Laura Suter
28 May 2019

·         From 30 November no-one can open a new Help to Buy ISA

·         Just three providers currently offer a cash Lifetime ISA

·         Top Help to Buy ISA interest rate is 3%, compared to 1.1% for Lifetime ISA

 

Laura Suter, personal finance analyst at investment platform AJ Bell, comments:

“We’re now just six months away from the end of the Help to Buy ISA – after 30th November this year no-one can open a new account. It’s been replaced by the Lifetime ISA, but so far the number of providers offering the newest ISA has been disappointingly small.

“There are just three cash Lifetime ISA offerings for savers to choose from, compared to 27 Help to Buy ISA providers. What’s more this lack of competition is hitting savers’ pockets, as the top Help to Buy ISA interest rate is 3%, compared to the top Lifetime ISA that pays 1.1%.

“With the Help to Buy ISA’s days numbered we would hope that providers are working behind the scenes to launch a Lifetime ISA later this year, which in turn will boost take-up among first-time buyers and lead to a healthier market. In the first year of its launch, 166,000 people opened a Lifetime ISA saving a total of £517m, but there’s no doubt that more providers would build more awareness, and would mean more people are aware that they can use the ISA to get up to £1,000 a year towards their first home.

“If you already have a Help to Buy ISA you can keep paying into it for another decade, and you have until 1 December 2030 to claim your Government bonus. Alternatively you can transfer to a Lifetime ISA and benefit from a higher limit of £450,000 on the value of the property you can buy, a bigger potential Government bonus each year and the ability to save lump sums rather than just monthly.”

See our guide to whether the Help to Buy ISA or Lifetime ISA is right for you:

With the Lifetime ISA you can get more free money – Both the Help to Buy ISA and Lifetime ISA get the same 25% Government bonus, but with the Help to Buy ISA this is limited to the first £12,000 saved – meaning a maximum bonus of £3,000. With the Lifetime ISA you can get up to £1,000 a year in Government bonus, up until the age of 50. If you opened a Lifetime ISA at age 18, that is a maximum Government bonus of £32,000 (or £33,000 if you’re lucky enough to have your 18th birthday before 6th April).

You can save a larger amount in the Lifetime ISA – You can save up to £4,000 a year into the Lifetime ISA, compared to the Help to Buy ISA where you can save up to £200 a month, plus an extra £1,200 in the first month of opening the account.

Need to buy in 12 months? Use a Help to Buy ISA – You must have the Lifetime ISA open for 12 months before you can use the money to buy your first home. This means if you plan to buy in the next year, you should use a Help to Buy ISA, which doesn’t have this restriction.

You can invest a lump sum in a Lifetime ISA, but only save monthly into a Help to Buy ISA – With the Help to Buy ISA you are limited to saving £200 a month and if you miss a month, you cannot pay double in the next month. With the Lifetime ISA you can contribute up to £4,000 a year, in one or more lump sums or as a regular monthly saving.

Help to Buy ISA cash rates are higher – If you want to save into cash you’ll get a higher interest rate with the Help to Buy ISA. The best Help to Buy ISA cash rate is currently 3% from Penrith Building Society, although it’s only available to residents of Cumbria – the highest nationwide rate is 2.58% from Barclays. In comparison, the highest Lifetime ISA cash rate is 1.1% from Newcastle Building Society. However, the higher annual limit of the Lifetime ISA, and so higher Government bonus, wipes some of this advantage out.

Cash Lifetime ISA: At 1.1% interest, on the maximum £4,000 saved, you’d end up with £5,055 with the Government bonus on the Lifetime Isa after one year, with interest and the Government bonus – a £1,055 increase.

At 2.58% interest on the maximum £2,400 saved with a Help to Buy ISA, you’d end up with £3,061.92 after one year – an increase of £661.92.

You can have an investment Lifetime ISA – You can only hold your Help to Buy ISA in cash, while you can invest your Lifetime ISA in funds, shares, investment trusts and ready-made portfolios. This means if you are saving your money for longer you have the potential to generate greater returns by investing.

If you live outside London you can buy a more expensive property with the Lifetime ISA – With the Help to Buy ISA you can use it on a property worth up to £450,000 in London, but only on property worth up to £250,000 outside London. This has proved a problem for some in expensive areas outside of London, such as Cambridge and Brighton. With the Lifetime ISA there is a limit of £450,000 regardless of where in the UK you’re buying.

You can use the Lifetime ISA bonus for a house deposit, where the Help to Buy ISA bonus is only available after exchange – The Help to Buy ISA Government bonus is only issued after you have exchanged on a property, so cannot be used for the initial deposit, which has to be handed over at exchange. With a Lifetime ISA the Government bonus is paid monthly, meaning it can be used towards your deposit at exchange.

You can only use the Lifetime ISA if you’re between 18 and 40 years old – if you are over the age of 40, and have not yet opened a Lifetime ISA, you have missed the boat. This means your only option (up to the end of November this year) is to use a Help to Buy ISA to buy your first property.

If you change your mind, you’ll pay an exit fee on the Lifetime ISA – With the Help to Buy ISA, if you change your mind or want to make a withdrawal, for something other than buying your first home, you can redeem your money. As the Government bonus will not have been paid into the account, you don’t need to return any money. With the Lifetime ISA, if you want to withdraw money for anything other than buying a first home, retirement, or if you have a terminal illness, you will pay an exit fee. This is intended to claw back the 25% Government bonus, but it actually results in you losing the Government bonus and paying a 6.25% fee on top.

For example, if you invest £4,000, you’ll get the 25% government top-up and have £5,000 in total. If you choose to withdraw the money not for a first home or retirement, you’ll be charged 25%, which equates to £1,250. This means you have £3,750 left, £250 less than your initial investment.

Laura Suter
Director of Personal Finance

Laura Suter is director of personal finance at AJ Bell. She is a spokesperson for the company on a range of personal finance topics and is quoted in print media and regularly appears on TV and radio. She is also a founding ambassador of AJ Bell Money Matters, a campaign to get more women investing and engaging with their finances; she hosts two podcasts; and regularly speaks at events and webinars. Prior to joining AJ Bell she was a multi-award winning financial journalist, specialising in investments. Laura joined AJ Bell from the Daily Telegraph, where she was investment editor. She has previously worked for adviser publications in London and New York and has a degree in Journalism Studies from University of Sheffield.

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