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You are at:Home»Finance»ISA shake-up set to undo decade-old simplification
ISA Individual Savings Account UK

ISA shake-up set to undo decade-old simplification

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Posted By sme-admin on June 5, 2026 Finance

Rob Morgan, Chief Investment Analyst at Charles Stanley Direct, part of Raymond James Wealth Management, outlines the potential fallout from the upcoming ISA reforms. 

From April 2027, the annual Cash ISA allowance will be cut from £20,000 to £12,000 for those under 65, while the overall ISA allowance will remain at £20,000. Older savers will retain the full £20,000 cash allowance.

Alongside this, the Chancellor is reportedly planning to introduce a 22% charge on interest earned on cash held within Stocks & Shares ISAs – effectively aligning with the basic rate of tax on savings from next tax year (2027/28).

The reforms aim to nudge savers towards investing rather than holding cash – a laudable aim. However, the suite of “anti-circumvention” measures risks reversing much of the simplification of ISAs achieved in 2014, replacing it with a more restrictive and complex landscape.

Back to a pre-2014 world

The proposed 22% charge in some ways marks a return to the pre-2014 framework, when interest on cash held within Stocks & Shares ISAs faced a levy of 20%.

That system was swept away by George Osborne’s ISA reforms in July 2014, which introduced a single, more flexible ISA allowance and made all cash returns – regardless of whether they were from interest in a Cash or Stocks & Shares variety – fully tax free.

Reintroducing a tax charge on cash within Stocks & Shares ISAs means blurring those lines once again. A product that has long been marketed as a straightforward, tax-free wrapper will come with a significant caveat, and it remains to be seen how much damage that will do to the clarity and appeal of the ISA ‘brand’.

Prudent ISA investing strategies are in danger

The potential tax charge on cash held in Stocks & Shares ISAs is one part of a broader set of changes that could increase complexity and reduce the flexibility of ISA. And here there are significant consequences for many existing ISA holders caught up in the regime change.

The Government has indicated that it will restrict transfers from Stocks & Shares ISAs into Cash ISAs, creating a one-way system that allows savers to move into investments, but not back into cash.

In addition, HMRC has signalled that so-called “cash-like” investments held within Stocks & Shares ISAs – such as money market funds – could face restrictions. These measures are designed to prevent savers from sidestepping the reduced Cash ISA allowance by holding low-risk assets within investment ISAs. However, they also risk catching perfectly legitimate investment activity if they are not pragmatically designed.

Holding cash or near-cash investments within a Stocks & Shares ISA is an important part of how many private investors actively manage risk. Customers frequently hold cash temporarily while deciding how to deploy money, or use low-risk assets to de-risk portfolios. This is particularly the case as they approach or enter retirement when controlling market volatility can be paramount. Restricting these strategies could inhibit flexibility at precisely the point it is most needed.

Plus, for many would-be investors, particularly those with limited experience, these changes could increase confusion and erode the confidence that ISAs can be adapted to changing needs and risk levels as and when required.

Undermining the investment agenda?

ISAs have been one of the UK’s most successful financial products partly because of their simplicity and flexibility. The post-2014 reforms helped people navigate the system. By contrast, the new regime introduces different effective tax treatments, possible restrictions on the types of assets that can be held, and one-way transfer rules that reduce flexibility.

Encouraging more people to invest is undoubtedly a sound policy objective. Yet there is a risk that increasing complexity and, in particular, removing ‘gateway’ options such as holding cash or low-risk assets within a Stocks & Shares ISA could run counter to that.

Rather than nudging cautious savers towards investing, a more complex and restrictive system may simply deter participation. In that sense, the reforms risk undoing part of what has made ISAs so effective over the years. Simplification helped broaden their appeal, but reintroducing complexity may narrow it.

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