If your savings are sitting in a current account or a low-rate instant access account, you're effectively losing money every year. With inflation averaging 2-4% in the UK and many current accounts paying 0-1% interest, the **real value** (purchasing power) of your money declines over time.
How often should I switch savings accounts?+
Review rates quarterly and switch when your current rate is more than 0.5% below the best available. Some accounts offer bonus rates for the first 12 months — diary the end date so you can switch before dropping to the lower rate.
Is it worth having multiple savings accounts?+
Yes. Using separate accounts for different goals (emergency fund, holiday, house deposit) helps you stay organised and allows you to optimise each pot for its specific time horizon — easy access for emergencies, fixed rates for longer-term goals.
Do I pay tax on savings interest?+
It depends on how much you earn in interest. Basic-rate taxpayers get £1,000 tax-free (Personal Savings Allowance), higher-rate taxpayers get £500. Interest within ISAs is always tax-free. Any interest above your PSA is taxed at your marginal income tax rate.
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