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HM Treasury

Financial services

Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs)

Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) are the Government's primary vehicle for tax-advantaged adult saving outside pensions.

ISAs have helped to make saving, and the benefits of saving, more accessible for ordinary investors. They have reached a wider section of the population than Tax Exempt Special Savings Accounts (TESSAs) or Personal Equity Plans (PEPs), which they replaced. Over 19 million people - around one in three adults - now have an ISA. They have also increased take-up among both low-income groups and the young. ISA savings are supported by an estimated £2.4bn a year in tax relief.

At Budget 2009 the Government announced that from 6 October 2009, the ISA limits would rise for people aged 50 and over to £10,200, of which up to £5,100 could be saved in cash. The ISA limits increase to the same level for all savers from April 2010.

When ISAs were introduced in 1999 they were guaranteed to run for an initial ten years to 2009 and the Government set initial annual investment limits of £7,000 with a maximum of £3,000 in cash, to encourage new saving. In Budget 2005 the Chancellor announced that these initial investment limits would be guaranteed to at least 2010 (PDF file of Chapter 5 Budget 2005).

This builds on previous work in developing the ISA policy. In the Autumn of 2006, the Government concluded its internal review of the ISA, which was promised when the regime was introduced. As a result of the review, a package of reforms was announced to make the regime simpler and more flexible. Details of these reforms were published alongside the 2006 Pre-Budget Report, setting out proposals for implementation and seeking views on a range of practical issues. The package was amended at Budget 2007 in light of responses received from the financial services industry and elsewhere. Budget 2007 also announced increases in the ISA annual investment limits (PDF file of Chapter 5, Budget 2007), to come into effect in April 2008, alongside the package of reforms.

Key elements of the final package, which came into effect on 6 April 2008, are:

The HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) website has the draft legislation for the changes that will take place from October 2009.

For further information see HM Revenue and Customs' ISA website.

Related links

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External links

Savings index

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