Cash ISA in 2026 — Fixed vs Easy Access

Cash ISA in 2026 — Fixed vs Easy Access

Cash ISAs went through a quiet renaissance in 2024–25 as interest rates rose. In 2026 the rate environment is shifting — the question of fixed-term vs easy-access matters more than it has in a decade.

Where Rates Sit in Mid-2026

  • Easy-access Cash ISA: 3.5%–4.4% AER (top providers)
  • 1-year fixed Cash ISA: 4.0%–4.6% AER
  • 2-year fixed Cash ISA: 3.9%–4.5% AER
  • 5-year fixed Cash ISA: 3.8%–4.4% AER

The yield curve is flat to slightly inverted — short-term rates marginally above long-term. This is unusual and tells you the market expects rates to fall over the next 2–3 years.

Easy-Access ISA — Pros and Cons

Pros:

  • Add and withdraw any time
  • Rate adjusts as base rate moves
  • No penalty for early access
  • Some are “flexible ISAs” — withdraw and replace without using more allowance

Cons:

  • Rate can drop suddenly when base rate falls
  • Promotional rates often revert after 12 months
  • Not all easy-access ISAs are flexible-ISA registered

Fixed ISA — Pros and Cons

Pros:

  • Rate locked for the term
  • Generally slightly higher rates (in normal environments)
  • Predictable maturity value

Cons:

  • Early withdrawal usually forfeits 90–180 days of interest
  • Some fixed ISAs don’t allow further contributions after the initial deposit
  • Cash is locked for the term

When Fixed Wins in 2026

Given the inverted curve, a 1-year fix at 4.4%–4.6% looks attractive if you expect easy-access rates to drop below 4% within a year. If the Bank of England cuts the base rate twice in 2026 (market expectation), easy-access ISA rates would slip toward 3% by year-end.

A 1-year fix at 4.4% effectively locks in today’s rate against an expected drop.

When Easy-Access Wins

  • You need the money in the next 12 months
  • You expect to top up the ISA throughout the year (must check that the easy-access ISA allows further contributions)
  • You’re building an emergency fund inside the ISA

The Two-ISA Strategy

In 2026 (under the multi-ISA-provider rules from April 2024), you can split:

  • Half in easy-access for emergency liquidity (~£10,000 of the £20k allowance)
  • Half in 1-year fix for slightly higher rate (~£10,000)

This is the most popular middle path for cautious savers.

The Tax-Wrapper Angle

The point of a Cash ISA is that interest is tax-free. For higher-rate taxpayers (40% bracket), this matters: £20,000 earning 4.5% = £900 interest. In a normal savings account, that £900 becomes £540 after tax (or £504 if you’ve used your £500 Personal Savings Allowance). In an ISA, the £900 stays whole.

For basic-rate taxpayers, the Personal Savings Allowance of £1,000 (basic rate) already covers up to ~£22,000 of savings at 4.5% — meaning the Cash ISA’s tax advantage is partly lost. For these savers, the rate matters more than the wrapper.

Bottom Line

If you’re a higher-rate taxpayer, max your Cash ISA allowance every year — the tax saving is real. Split 50/50 easy-access and 1-year fix for the best balance of liquidity and rate. Basic-rate taxpayers should compare ISA rates against non-ISA savings rates including the PSA — the better headline rate often wins.

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