
Top Savings Accounts
0.5% easy access or up to 1.25% fixed
With the Bank of England's base rate at an all-time low, savings rates have been hit hard. Yet if you're on a pitiful 0.01% – as many are – you can still smash that rate. So whether you've £1 or £1 million, take action now to ensure you're getting every possible penny of interest on your savings. Below we take you through the maze of accounts to find the most profitable home for your cash – and keep it safe.
Other MSE savings guides...
Regular savings: Up to 3% interest if you can save monthly
Help to Save: 50% bonus on savings if you're on a low income
Children's savings: Earn up to 3.5% on kids' savings
Cash ISAs: Save permanently tax-free with an ISA
Current accounts: Earn up to 2% on smaller sums

Savings account need-to-knows
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What is a savings account?
It's simply an account for you to put money in and earn interest. Where bank accounts have more bells and whistles, letting you withdraw cash, pay bills and use a debit card to spend, savings accounts are solely there for you to earn interest.
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Up to £85,000 per person is protected in UK-regulated financial institutions
Every bank we mention in this guide is fully UK-regulated, which means you get £85,000 per person protection in the event it goes bust (£170,000 for joint accounts). The only thing to watch is some providers, such as HSBC and First Direct, share licences so you only have £85,000 protection across both banks. See the Are Your Savings Safe? guide.
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Interest from savings is tax-free for most
Savings interest is paid tax-free and most won't pay any tax on it at all. Basic-rate taxpayers can earn £1,000/year tax-free and higher-rate taxpayers £500, so it's only those with very large amounts of savings who would need to worry about this – and that's less than 5% of us. Find full info in our Personal Savings Allowance guide.
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You can split money across different accounts to get a mix of benefits
If you've lots to save, you can open several different savings accounts. For example, if you had £20,000 and you needed £5,000 of it in two months' time, you could stick £5,000 in the top easy-access account, and then put the rest into a one-year fix. If you don't yet know what you want to do with your cash, just stick your money (up to the protected £85,000) in the top easy-access account while you're deciding.

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11 tips for choosing the right savings account
There are many different types of savings account and if you're not sure what each one does, the choice can be confusing. Before we get to the top savings accounts of each type, here are some tips to help you decide if saving is the right choice, and if so, where to put your money...
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Easy-access savings
The main idea with easy-access accounts is that you pay cash into them, they pay you interest while the money's in the account and you can withdraw whenever you want. But interest rates are usually lower than on notice and fixed savings accounts, because you pay for the flexibility. And since the rates are variable, it's worth checking your rate regularly to make sure you're getting the best possible returns.

Easy-access accounts – what we'd go for
Easy-access rates have dropped sharply in the last few months, though there are a couple of special accounts for small amounts of money that can pay up to 2% – you can find these in the table below.
Yet when it comes to standard easy-access savings, which likely suit more people, app-only Atom Bank and Aldermore pay the joint-top rate at 0.5% (Atom takes our top spot thanks to its lower minimum).
Provider | Rate (AER variable) | Unlimited withdrawals? | Min/max deposit | How to open | Max FSCS protection |
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Top standard easy-access rates. Here are the highest paying traditional accounts. | |||||
Atom Bank (1) | 0.5% | ✓ | None/ £100,000 | App | £85,000 |
Aldermore* | 0.5% | ✓ | £1,000/ £1m | Online | £85,000 |
Easy-access savings via other routes (click links to read more) | |||||
Chip autosave app (1) | 1.25% (not compounded) | ✓ | £1/ £5,000 | App | £85,000, shared (2) |
Virgin Money current account | 2.02% | ✓ | None/ £1,000 | Online | £85,000, shared (3) |
(1) Can't be opened as a joint account. (2) With ClearBank. (3) With Clydesdale Bank and Yorkshire Bank.
Remember, cash in all the accounts above is protected up to £85,000 per person, per financial institution. If you've more than £85,000 it's best to spread savings across several different banks just in case one gets into difficulty.
Quick questions
Notice savings accounts
Notice accounts are good for people who know they'll need their money, but don't know when. A good example might be if you are a first-time buyer. You know you'll need your saved cash for the deposit, but you might find your dream home in two months or in 10. A (shortish) notice account would let you get a boosted rate, but also let you access your cash in time to exchange.

Notice accounts – what we'd go for
If you're sure you won't need instant access to your cash, our pick is Charter Savings Bank as it pays the top notice-account rate of 0.63%. Note you'll need to give a fairly lengthy 120 days' notice if you do want to make a withdrawal at any point.
If you think you can't wait that long, Secure Trust Bank offers a very slightly lower rate of 0.61% with a much shorter 60-day notice period. However, you can only make three withdrawals a year from this one, so make sure you can stick to that (or can use one of the withdrawals to move your cash elsewhere).
Provider | Rate (AER variable) | Notice | Min/max deposit | How to open | Max FSCS protection |
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Charter Savings Bank | 0.63% | 120 days | £5,000/ £1m | Online/ post | £85,000 |
Secure Trust Bank | 0.61% | 60 days (1) | £1,000/ £1m | Online | £85,000 |
Moneybox | 0.6% | 95 days | £1/ £85,000 | App | £85,000, shared (2) |
(1) Maximum three capital withdrawals per calendar year. (2) Shared with Investec.
Ecology BS and Cambridge BS offer higher
Quick questions
Fixed-rate accounts
Savings rates have been on a downward spiral recently. And with the Bank of England investigating negative interest rates as a possibility, it seems unlikely that conditions for savers will improve any time soon (though of course there are no guarantees).
If you're worried about rates falling further, fixed-rate accounts (aka 'fixed-rate bonds'), offer some protection. With a fix, you get guaranteed returns for a set time – so if you want rate certainty, fixing is an easy way to get it. Just remember you normally can't take your money out during the term, so only lock away what you definitely won't need.

One-year fixed savings – what we'd go for
Currently, Shawbrook Bank offers the best standard one-year rate of 0.65%. You can open an account online with £1,000.
Alternatively, if you're comfortable with a small element of risk to the 'interest' you get, you can beat this rate. QIB pays 0.8% on its one-year sharia account through the savings platform Raisin. This is the 'expected profit' rate rather than guaranteed interest, though QIB has always met its expected rates in the past. Anyone can open an account with £1,000, but Raisin newbies can also get £5-£15 additional cashback when saving between £5,000 and £85,000.
Provider | Rate (AER) | Interest paid | Min/max deposit | How to open | Max FSCS protection |
Top standard one-year fixes. Here are the highest paying traditional accounts. | |||||
Shawbrook Bank | 0.65% | Monthly or annually | £1,000/ £2m | Online | £85,000 |
Atom Bank (1) | 0.6% | Monthly or at maturity | £50/ £100,000 | App | £85,000 |
Saffron BS | 0.6% | At maturity | £500/ £500,000 | Online/ post/ branch | £85,000 |
Top sharia account. Pays 'expected profit' and beats the accounts above on rate. See how it works. | |||||
QIB (UK) (1) | 0.8% + £5-£15 cashback for some | At maturity | £1,000/ £85,000 | Online | £85,000 |
(1) Can't be opened as a joint account.

Two-year fixed savings – what we'd go for
With two-year fixes, the rates are higher than one-year fixes, but in return your money is locked away for longer. So your choice will be guided by whether you think rates might go down in future – if so, you may want to fix for longer now (provided you're certain you won't need access to your cash).
Currently, Shawbrook Bank pays the top rate of 0.82% on its two-year fixed option. However, if you don't mind a small element of risk when it comes to interest, you can beat this rate. QIB offers 0.9% on its two-year sharia account – this is the 'expected profit' rate rather than guaranteed interest, though QIB has always met its expected rates in the past. Anyone can open an account online with £1,000, but Raisin newbies can get an additional £5-£15 cashback when saving between £5,000 and £85,000.
Provider | Rate (AER) | Interest paid | Min/max deposit | How to open | Max FSCS protection |
Top standard two-year fixes. Here are the highest paying traditional accounts. | |||||
Shawbrook Bank | 0.82% | Monthly or annually | £1,000/ £2m | Online | £85,000 |
Zenith Bank UK (1) | 0.8% + £5-£15 cashback for some | At maturity | £1,000/ £2m (2) | Online | £85,000 |
Top sharia account. Pays 'expected profit' and beats the accounts above on rate. See how it works. | |||||
QIB UK (1) | 0.9% + £5-£15 cashback for some | At maturity | £1,000/ £85,000 | Online | £85,000 |
(1) Can't be opened as a joint account. (2) Max deposit £85,000 if opened via Raisin.

We've included the top three-year and five-year fixes below. You can get a slightly better rate if you lock in for five years, but you'll need to weigh up whether it's worth it. What you gain in certainty you give up in flexibility, since you won't be able to access your money, even if rates rise during the term.
If you decide you do want a longer fix, Zenith Bank UK and Secure Trust Bank offer the joint-top rate of 1%. However, if you're saving £5,000 to £85,000 and new to savings platform Raisin, you can get an additional £5-£15 cashback bonus with Zenith's account.
The joint-top five-year rate of 1.25% is offered by Shawbrook Bank and UBL. Here we'd go with Shawbrook Bank, as UBL doesn't offer compound interest and has a higher minimum deposit.
Three-year fixed rates
Provider | Rate (AER) | Interest paid | Min/max deposit | How to open | Max FSCS protection |
Top standard three-year fixes. Here are the highest paying traditional accounts. | |||||
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Zenith Bank UK (1) | 1% + £5-£15 cashback for some | Annually | £1,000/ £2m (2) | Online | £85,000 |
United Trust Bank | 1% | Annually | £5,000/ £1m | Online | £85,000 |
(1) Can't be opened as a joint account. (2) Max deposit £85,000 if opened via Raisin.
Five-year fixed rates
Provider | Rate (AER) | Interest paid | Min/max deposit | How to open | Max FSCS protection |
Top standard five-year fixes. Here are the highest paying traditional accounts. | |||||
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Shawbrook Bank | 1.25% | Monthly or annually | £1,000/ £2m | Online | £85,000 |
UBL | 1.25% | Monthly, annually or at maturity (1) | £2,000/ £1m | Online | £85,000 |
(1) Interest paid out of account and not compounded.
Boost your savings interest
With interest rates so low, we've a couple of ways of boosting the returns you get - but they're a bit more complicated than opening a standard savings account...
Chip+1 savings account 1.25% (newbies only)
Chip is a savings app you connect your current account to through Open Banking. It's known for autosaving, where it uses an algorithm to work out how much you can afford to save. Normally these apps don't pay interest, or very little, but its new Chip+1 account* (accessible via the code MSE21) pays 1.25% annually if you're new to Chip. Though there's a lot you need to know before you sign up...
- You can save up to £2,000 for free or £5,000 for a fee. The default plan is ChipAI which pays 1.25% variable on up to £5,000 and charges a £1.50 fee every four weeks – giving you access to its autosaving features.
Alternatively, you can opt for the fee-free ChipLite plan which pays 1.25% variable on up to £2,000 and here there's no autosaving – you just choose to put your cash in.
But unless you're saving more than £3,560, the extra interest you get with the ChipAI plan is wiped out by the fee. Only if you save the full £5,000 (or close to that) does the extra interest beat our top-pick easy access savings account, once you've taken account of the fee.
- You can normally only get this if a friend refers you or you them, but… MSE is your friend. Newbies wanting to access Chip+1 normally need to do so via its refer-a-friend scheme, where existing Chip customers refer someone new - then both get the deal. Yet we've managed to get it to give us the code MSE21, which cuts out all that faff if you're new to Chip – put it in the VIP code box once you've downloaded the app and registered via Chip+1*.
- The money you put in is fully UK savings-safety protected. Chip has partnered with ClearBank to run its Chip+1 account. As ClearBank has a full UK banking licence, money held there gets the normal UK savings safety protection like other savings.
- The interest is technically a bonus and isn't savings-safety protected. Chip is technically giving you a marketing bonus for saving. This money doesn't go into your Chip+1 account – it's held separately, in a ring-fenced high-street bank account. So technically not quite the same protection, but not the biggest worry.
Though you could always withdraw the full interest balance and then redeposit it into your Chip+1 account to get the protection.
- The interest is payable every 12 weeks but DOES NOT compound. The interest is calculated weekly on a Tuesday, and then paid every 12 weeks (if you close an account before it's paid you get nothing for that period). Yet as the interest is held separately you don't get interest on the interest. Still, at 1.25% it dwarfs what others are paying.
- To use Chip+1, you'll need to connect your bank account. Chip connects to most (but not all) bank account providers. These are Bank of Scotland, Barclays, Danske, First Direct, Halifax, HSBC, Lloyds Bank, Marks & Spencer, Monzo, Nationwide, NatWest, RBS, Revolut, Santander, Starling, TSB and Ulster Bank.
- What is autosaving? Autosaving apps use clever tech to work out what you can afford to save and then do it for you, er, automatically, moving money from your bank account to a virtual savings account. The idea is that you start building up savings without really noticing the cash is going – useful if you find it difficult to put money aside or don't know how to start saving.
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The Savings Calculator
This calculator allows you to calculate how much interest you'll be paid, how long you'll need to save for something or tells you how much you need to save each month to meet a goal.
You might get one rate now, but unless you've fixed your rate, it's likely you won't get the same rate in a year – so you may need to redo the calculation then.
The calculator assumes you put money in at the beginning of each month, so if this isn't how you do it, the answers will be slightly out. If you don't make regular deposits but put lump sums in, figure out the monthly equivalent for a rough answer. Feel free to play with the results to see how it impacts your savings.
Want to complain about your savings provider?
If your savings provider has given you the incorrect interest rate, or you haven't received your interest at all, then you don't have to suffer in silence. It's always worth trying to call your provider first to see if it can help, but if not...

Free tool to help you complain
This tool helps you draft and manage your complaint. It's totally free to use, and it's offered by Resolver, a firm we work with to help people get complaints justice.
RESOLVER – FREE COMPLAINTS TOOL*
If the company won't help, Resolver also helps you escalate your complaint to the free Financial Ombudsman Service.

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