Help to Buy ISA
Arguably the biggest ISA change during the Budget was the introduction of a brand new one: the Help to Buy ISA. A form of Cash ISA (so watch out, remember you can only contribute to one Cash ISA per year), this new product is designed to help first time buyers to save for their deposit. Savers, who will be able to start their account with up to ÂŁ1,000 in autumn 2015, can pay in as much as ÂŁ200 a month, which the government will match at a rate of 25%, up to a maximum of ÂŁ3,000. The government contributions and the accounts are per person, not per house, so a couple could end up with a deposit of ÂŁ30,000 between them, ÂŁ6,000 of which would be government funded. The final details of how the accounts will work are being ironed out now, ahead of their release towards the end of the year.
ISAs become âfully flexibleâ
Another move due in the autumn, the announcement of the âfully flexibleâ ISA was positive for savers looking for a bit more leeway on savings, although ISA providers will need to do some administration work to make sure it works properly! The move corrects a previous issue for some whereby money deposited in an ISA and then withdrawn before the end of the tax year, still counted towards that yearâs contributions. With the âfully flexibleâ change, this now wonât be the case: anything deposited and withdrawn from an ISA can be put back in again later as part of that yearâs allowance.
New limits for 2015/2016 tax year
Given that recent years have seen a big increase in the ISA limit, there was no large surprise (or giveaway) here. ISA limits were increased again, but only marginally, rising from ÂŁ15,000 to ÂŁ15,240. As per the changes from a year ago there is now no limit on how much of that amount can go into a Cash ISA and how much to a Stocks and Shares ISA.
New investment types
Given the rise of âalternative investmentsâ, such as peer-to-peer lending and others, this was perhaps no surprise either. During the course of the new tax year, the government has committed to introduce new investment types to be eligible within ISAs. These were initially announced as including âlisted bonds issued by a co-operative society and community benefit society and SME securities issued by companies trading on a recognised stock exchange.â There was further commitment to investigate and report back on âdebt and equity securities offered via crowd funding platformsâ, as well as the aforementioned peer-to-peer loans.
Sources: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/416330/47881_Budget_2015_Web_Accessible.pdf