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Parent guide · Junior ISA

Junior ISA explained — what to open, who can pay in, how to switch

The Junior ISA (JISA) is the UK’s default tax-free savings wrapper for children. £9,000 a year can go in, all interest and growth is tax-free forever, and the child gets full control at 18. Here’s how to choose, switch and avoid the common traps.

Audience
Parents / grandparents
Reading time
11–13 min read
Topic
Junior ISA
UK relevance
UK-wide
Tax year
2026/27
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

What this guide covers

A Junior ISA is opened by a parent or legal guardian for a child under 18. £9,000/yr can be paid in by anyone (parents, grandparents, family friends). All interest, dividends and capital gains are tax-free forever. The child can manage it from 16, but can't withdraw until 18 — when it becomes a normal adult ISA. Either Cash or Stocks & Shares; mix is fine.

What a Junior ISA actually is

A Junior ISA is a tax-protected wrapper. Like an adult ISA, it is not a product in itself — you choose whether to hold cash, shares, funds or a mix inside it. The tax wrapper means HMRC charges:

JISAs replaced Child Trust Funds (CTFs) for children born from 3 January 2011 onwards. (CTFs are still active for older children — see the separate guide.)

Annual limit
£9,000
Eligible age
Under 18
Tax-free
All growth
Open per child
1 Cash + 1 S&S

Cash JISA vs Stocks & Shares JISA — which to open

You can have one Cash JISA and one Stocks & Shares JISA per child at the same time. The £9,000 annual limit is shared across both.

Cash JISA. Pays interest like a savings account. Currently 4–5% AER from competitive providers (Loughborough Building Society, Nottingham Building Society, Coventry, and a few high-street banks). FSCS protected to £85,000 per institution. Use when:

Stocks & Shares JISA. Holds funds, shares, or ETFs. Historically averages roughly 5–7% real return per year over long horizons, but volatile in any single year. Use when:

Many parents start in cash for an infant, then switch to S&S when the long horizon emerges. Both are legitimate.

For most newborns: a Stocks & Shares JISA with monthly direct debit into a low-cost global tracker fund (e.g. Vanguard FTSE Global All Cap, HSBC FTSE All-World, iShares MSCI ACWI) is the mainstream choice. Fees under 0.4% combined are achievable.

Who can pay in

Anyone can contribute to a child's JISA — not just the parent who opened it.

If a grandparent wants to gift larger sums, they can also consider a Junior SIPP (with tax relief on the way in), Premium Bonds, or a bare trust. See related guides.

Watch the limit. If the £9,000 limit is breached, HMRC asks the over-contribution to be removed. Coordinate with grandparents or anyone else regularly contributing. The provider won't always block excess deposits at the moment they happen.

When the child takes control

Two transitions:

If the pot is meaningful at 18 (over £5,000), this is a hard moment. See the 18th-birthday handover guide for the conversation framework most parents wish they'd started a year earlier.

How to switch JISA provider without losing the wrapper

The wrong way: withdraw the money from one JISA and pay it into a new one. That loses the JISA tax wrapper on the withdrawn amount.

The right way: a JISA transfer. The new provider initiates the transfer, the old one closes the account and ships the funds direct. The tax wrapper is preserved. Three rules:

Reasons to switch:

Typical transfer time: 2–4 weeks for Cash, 4–8 weeks for Stocks & Shares (out-of-market period). No tax or fee impact unless the old provider has an exit charge.

A realistic 18-year JISA scenario

Open a Stocks & Shares JISA at birth. Pay in £100/month, increased to £200 from age 10. Assume 5% real annual return (after inflation, after platform fee).

AgeCumulative paid inEstimated value (5% real return)
5£6,000~£6,700
10£12,000~£15,500
14£21,600~£28,000
18£31,200~£44,500

£44,500 in today's money in the child's name on their 18th birthday. Enough to cover most of a 4-year university experience, a first-house deposit in many parts of the UK, or 12–15 years of LISA contributions if rolled forward.

The numbers are illustrative, not guaranteed. Real returns vary widely with sequence-of-returns risk. But the order of magnitude — tens of thousands from £100–£200/month over 18 years — is realistic.

NCNational Curriculum links

Full mapping in the curriculum map.

Cite this guide
UK Tax Drag (2026). Junior ISA explained — what to open, who can pay in, how to switch. Parent guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/parent-jisa-explained.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0). CC BY 4.0.
Not financial or legal advice. This guide explains how the UK system works for educational purposes only. Rules can change between Budgets. Always check current thresholds on gov.uk and consider talking to a qualified financial adviser or solicitor before making significant decisions involving children’s money, trusts or inheritance planning.