PEPS: The Final Countdown: Still time to take a Tessa
Savers should take advantage of the overlap between the old and new systems. By Rachel Fixsen
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Your support makes all the difference.Tessas, or tax exempt special savings accounts, will vanish in barely a week's time. The savings account, brought in by the Tories in 1991, is due to be replaced on 6 April by Labour's new tax-exempt savings vehicle - the Individual Savings Account (ISA).
ISAs, like Tessas, allow you to reap tax-free interest on cash savings. They also place an annual limit on the amount of new money you can invest, but the limit for the cash element of an ISA - which can also be used to hold shares and insurance - is lower than the Tessa limit.
Savers can put up to pounds 9,000 in a Tessa over its five-year term, while for the first year only after launch the ISA cash limit will be pounds 3,000. After that an ISA only allows pounds 1,000 a year to be invested in cash.
It means not only can you save more tax-free with a Tessa, but anyone opening one of the accounts before the end of next week will be able to take advantage of the overlap between the two systems, gaining both Tessa and ISA annual allowances.
"And when the Tessa does mature in five years' time, you can reinvest the capital in an ISA, and that won't affect your ISA allowance," says Philippa Gee of Shrewsbury-based independent financial advisers Gee & Company.
So if you want a cash investment, it is still worth taking out a Tessa, advisers say. "Particularly at the moment when the outlook for shares over the next 12 to 18 months is a little uncertain," says Ms Gee.
When the Tessa matures, the capital, but not the interest, can be rolled over into a Tessa-only ISA. This will be a separate cash investment which will run alongside a cash mini-ISA or the cash element of a maxi-ISA.
The annual savings allowance may be higher, but Tessas are far less flexible than their replacements. Once invested, the capital in a Tessa cannot be withdrawn until the five-year term is up. If it is, all of the interest for the full term becomes taxable. ISAs, on the other hand, can be instant access accounts.
Most Tessas earn a variable rate of interest, which will probably fall over the next five years as the Bank of England cuts its interest rates. But a few providers offer fixed-rate Tessas. "This is certainly worth doing since we are in an environment of continually falling interest rates," says Ms Gee.
There can be penalties for switching from one Tessa provider to another during the term. Some providers charge a fee while others withhold up to six months' interest.
Being effectively locked into a Tessa over the next five years could be quite a problem.
After April, Tessas will not be offered to new customers. Institutions have been known to let interest rates become less than competitive on obsolete accounts, preferring instead to boost rates on accounts which are actively marketed to the public.
Providers deny this will happen with Tessas. "People will want to compete for rollover Tessas as and when Tessas mature," says Piers White, retail banking director of Fleming Premier Banking. "There will be strong competition to acquire those funds for Tessa-only ISAs," he says.
However, it is still worth choosing one where any penalty for switching is slight. Birmingham Midshires' Tessa, for example, pays a high rate of interest, but the penalty for transferring mid-term is the loss of 180 days' interest.
Alliance & Leicester pays slightly less but the transfer penalty is more lenient at 60 days' loss of interest. Ipswich Building Society only requires seven days' notice to transfer funds from one of its Tessas. "So clearly we'll have to keep rates competitive," says Paul Winter, sales marketing director at Ipswich.
Opting for one of a fixed-rate Tessa would give some security against rates becoming less than competitive, says Ms Gee.
When choosing a variable-rate Tessa, advisers warn against simply picking the institution at the top of the best-buy tables. Piers White says some providers are paying Tessa rates significantly above bank base rates, meaning they are making a loss which they will not be able to maintain. He recommends opting for a provider with a track record of paying good rates across all savings products.
Tessas are only worthwhile if they are held by taxpayers, since non-taxpayers do not have to pay tax on their savings anyway. But Ms Gee says couples often seem to forget this, and it is the non-taxpayer who holds the Tessa. "It is great that people have become educated to put investments into the non-taxpayer's name, but not in the case of Tessas," she says.
Gee & Company: 01743 236982
Ipswich Building Society: 01473 211021
Fleming Premier Banking: 0800 092 3300
Details of current high-interest Tessas are published in The Independent's best-buy tables on page 4 of this section
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