Lifetime ISA Explained: When the 25% Bonus Wins
—
The Lifetime ISA (LISA) gives a 25% government bonus on your contributions — up to £1,000 per year. Sounds too good to refuse. The catch: strict rules on what you can use it for.
How It Works
- Contribute up to £4,000 per tax year (counts toward your overall £20,000 ISA allowance)
- Government adds 25% bonus (max £1,000/year)
- Available for two uses only: first home purchase or retirement at 60
- Withdrawal for any other reason = 25% penalty (which effectively claws back the bonus and a bit more)
Eligibility
- Aged 18–39 when opening
- Can contribute until age 50
- UK resident
- One LISA per person (not per provider)
Best for First Home Buyers
If your goal is buying a first home in the next 1–10 years, LISA is excellent:
- Property value cap £450,000 (set in 2017, applies UK-wide)
- Combined with partner’s LISA: doubles the bonus
- Compatible with shared ownership and Help to Buy schemes
Best for Early Retirement Savings
For retirement use (age 60+):
- 30-year time horizon needed
- Tax-free growth + bonus = massive compounding
- Compared to pension: ISA wins for accessibility, pension wins for higher contribution limit + employer match
The 25% Penalty Trap
If you withdraw before 60 (and it’s not for a first home), you pay 25% penalty on the gross amount, not just the bonus.
Example:
- You contribute £4,000
- Government adds £1,000 = £5,000 in account
- You withdraw for non-eligible purpose
- Penalty: 25% of £5,000 = £1,250
- You receive: £3,750
You’re worse off than if you’d just kept the £4,000 in a regular savings account.
When LISA Beats Help to Buy ISA
Help to Buy ISA is closed to new applicants since 2019, so this comparison is for existing holders considering transfer:
- LISA: 25% bonus, paid monthly
- Help to Buy: 25% bonus, paid only at completion
LISA wins on flexibility unless you’re very close to completion already.
Common Mistakes
- Opening after 40 — not eligible
- Withdrawing for non-first-home before 60 — 25% penalty
- Forgetting £450k property cap — buying expensive London property invalidates bonus
- Not maxing the £4k yearly — £1k of bonus is free money
Investment vs Cash LISAs
Cash LISA: Earns interest only. Best for 0–4 year time horizons. Stocks & Shares LISA: Investment returns. Best for 5+ year horizons. Targets typically beat cash returns over long periods.
Top LISA Providers (2026)
- Moneybox — popular for first-time buyers, both cash and S&S options
- AJ Bell — competitive fees for S&S LISA
- Nutmeg — managed portfolios for hands-off investors
- Skipton Building Society — for cash LISA, simple option
What If You Change Your Mind?
You can transfer LISA between providers, change between cash and S&S, or use it for retirement later if you don’t buy first home — all without penalty (penalty only applies to withdrawals for unapproved purposes).
💡 Pro Tip: Open a LISA before age 40 even if you don’t fully fund it — it locks in eligibility for future contributions. You can contribute as much or as little as you want each year.


