British BulletinBritish Bulletin
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
What's On

Cardiff University fined £280,000 after staff develop occupational asthma following 15 years of allergen exposure

3 May 2026

Lib Dem MP insists ‘we welcome all faiths’ after candidate blocked from standing due to Christian beliefs

3 May 2026

King Charles’s viral bodyguard retires after US State Visit

3 May 2026

Graham Linehan reveals plan to ‘withdraw from the trans debate’ and return to comedy writing

3 May 2026

Major car brands recall 500,000 vehicles amid serious fire and crash fears

3 May 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
British Bulletin
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
British BulletinBritish Bulletin
Home » Rachel Reeves urged to ‘stick to her guns’ and halve tax-free cash ISA allowance to £10,000
Business

Rachel Reeves urged to ‘stick to her guns’ and halve tax-free cash ISA allowance to £10,000

By britishbulletin.com6 November 20253 Mins Read
Rachel Reeves urged to ‘stick to her guns’ and halve tax-free cash ISA allowance to £10,000
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Rachel Reeves has been urged to “stick to her guns” and cut the Cash ISA allowance to £10,000 in the upcoming Autumn Budget.

The move is said to generate gains worth £7.2billion for savers who instead deposit their cash into a stocks and shares ISA.

Around 2.8 million people currently save more than £10,000 a year into cash ISAs, roughly a third of all ISA holders, according to new research from investment platform IG.

The firm says that if the Chancellor goes ahead with plans to halve the annual cash ISA allowance to £10,000, many savers could see better long-term returns by investing the extra money instead of keeping it in cash.

YouGov polling cited by IG found that 28 per cent of higher-rate cash ISA savers said they would move any money above the new limit into a stocks and shares ISA.

Based on this, IG estimates that around 784,000 savers could each make more than £9,000 in extra returns over five years by investing their leftover cash in the stock market rather than leaving it in savings.

Overall, the total potential boost to savers’ returns could reach £7.2 billion – highlighting how a lower cash ISA limit could encourage more people to invest for growth rather than rely on low interest savings accounts.

Michael Healy, UK Managing Director at IG, said: “The Chancellor is absolutely right to tackle the UK’s overreliance on savings, starting with a product that does nothing for long-term wealth creation – the cash ISA.

Rachel Reeves is preparing significant reform to ISA reform | GETTY

“Reducing the annual allowance to £10,000 sends the right message that the government is serious about getting more people investing and we would encourage the government to go further by abolishing the cash ISA altogether.

“Our analysis refutes the claim from building societies that reducing the cash ISA allowance to £10,000 would impact their deposits significantly. Suggestions that it could threaten the mortgage market are simply scaremongering.

“The reality is that this reform is sensible, proportionate, and long overdue. We urge the Chancellor to stick to her guns.”

LATEST DEVELOPMENTS:

Only £1.6billion in annual cash ISA contributions would likely move away from building societies if the allowance is halved

| GETTY

IG’s research directly contradicts warnings from building societies about potential damage to mortgage lending from the proposed cash ISA reduction.

The platform’s analysis reveals that only £1.6billion in annual cash ISA contributions would likely move away from building societies if the allowance is halved. This figure represents merely 0.4 per cent of building societies’ total retail deposits, according to IG’s calculations.

The Building Society Association has previously stated that its members hold approximately 40 per cent of all cash ISA balances.

Rachel Reeves is preparing her latest Budget statement for November 26

| PA

However, IG’s findings suggest the actual impact on building society funding would be negligible, undermining industry claims that the policy change could threaten mortgage availability.

The minimal projected outflow indicates that concerns about destabilising the mortgage market through reduced building society deposits appear unfounded.

IG deployed a mobile advertising van through central London this week displaying messages directed at Rachel Reeves, encouraging the Chancellor to implement the rumoured cash ISA reduction.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Nationwide Building Society issues update on free £100 payment

Barretts of Woodbridge to close after 60 years as business falls into administration

The Tiny Box Company Founder who survived ‘brutal’ Dragons’ Den and brings in £10m a year

British Gas unveils £40million support package to help households with energy bills – who can apply

Airlines told to prepare for weeks of summer travel disruption amid jet fuel shortage chaos

‘Total rubbish!’ Jeff Banks and Ed Gemmell clash over Britain’s energy crisis

Labour have ‘crippled’ the economy says Jeff Banks in devastating assessment of nation’s finances

State pension ‘nightmare’ as Tony Blair slammed over triple lock axe proposal

Energy crisis as BP floats ditching North Sea after windfall tax raid on oil profits

Editors Picks

Lib Dem MP insists ‘we welcome all faiths’ after candidate blocked from standing due to Christian beliefs

3 May 2026

King Charles’s viral bodyguard retires after US State Visit

3 May 2026

Graham Linehan reveals plan to ‘withdraw from the trans debate’ and return to comedy writing

3 May 2026

Major car brands recall 500,000 vehicles amid serious fire and crash fears

3 May 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Brittan News and Updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

European Challenge Cup: Montpellier 18- 12 Dragons – French side book final test against Ulster

3 May 2026

Kemi Badenoch forced to apologise after including Bloody Sunday footage in veterans post

3 May 2026

Princess Eugenie to mark major family celebration after return to spotlight

3 May 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 British Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.