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Parent guide · LISA gifting

Helping your adult child start a Lifetime ISA

Once your child turns 18, the Lifetime ISA opens up. £4,000 in, £1,000 government bonus on top. Many parents gift into a LISA to accelerate a first-home deposit — but the rules around parental gifting, the 25% withdrawal charge, and the £450k house cap catch families out.

Audience
Parents / grandparents
Reading time
9–11 min read
Topic
LISA gifting
UK relevance
UK-wide
Tax year
2026/27
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

What this guide covers

A Lifetime ISA can be opened from age 18 to 39. £4,000/yr cap, 25% government bonus on top — up to £1,000 free per year. Used for a first home up to £450,000 or retirement from age 60. Parents can gift cash into a child's LISA — but only the child's name owns it, and parental control ends at 18.

The LISA mechanics (parent-facing)

If you’ve already read the teen-facing LISA guide, the rules are identical — just from a different vantage point. Key facts:

Open age
18–39
Annual contribution cap
£4,000
Government bonus
25%
Property cap
£450,000
Pension-age access
60+
Early-withdrawal penalty
25%

The £4,000 LISA contribution counts toward the £20,000 overall ISA allowance for the year. So a child maxing the LISA still has £16,000 of allowance available for a Cash or S&S ISA alongside.

How parental gifting into a child's LISA works

Once the child is 18, only they can open the LISA — their name, their National Insurance number, their identity verification. Parents cannot open it on their behalf.

Once open, anyone can contribute, but the rules around how the contribution is treated for tax matter:

Practically: a parent paying £4,000/yr into a child's LISA for 5 years uses £20,000 of gifting, well within most parents' lifetime gift exemptions if no other large gifts are flowing.

The bonus is still 25% regardless of who pays in. £4,000 contributed by a parent gets the same £1,000 government bonus as £4,000 paid by the child themselves. The bonus accrues to the child, not the parent.

First home or retirement? Help your child decide

The LISA has two legitimate uses, and the choice can be made years after opening:

First-home use.

Retirement use.

If neither happens and the child withdraws for any other reason, the 25% withdrawal charge applies. The maths is sneaky:

If there's a real chance the child will need the money before retirement and not for a first home — e.g. study abroad, big career change, family emergency — the LISA is the wrong wrapper. Use a normal Stocks & Shares ISA instead.

The £450,000 property cap and what to do about it

The cap has been frozen since LISA launched in 2017, despite house-price inflation. In 2026, the cap excludes:

If your child is likely to buy in an expensive area:

Practical parent gifting strategy

A simple five-year plan if the child is 18 and starts working:

  1. Year 1: Child opens LISA. Parent gifts £4,000 (uses £3,000 annual exemption + £1,000 of lifetime gifting capacity). Bonus £1,000 lands.
  2. Year 2: Parent gifts £4,000 again. Bonus £1,000. LISA balance now ~£10,500 with growth.
  3. Year 3–4: Same pattern. LISA balance ~£22,000 by end of year 4.
  4. Year 5: Child contributes their own £4,000 from job income (parental gifting capacity used up for the moment). Bonus £1,000.
  5. End of year 5: Pot ~£28,000–£32,000. Enough deposit for most regional first homes under £450k.

Total parental gifting: £16,000 over 4 years. Total government bonus: £5,000. Total child contribution: £4,000.

Document the gifts. Email the child each year confirming "this is a gift, not a loan, no expectation of repayment." Useful for IHT if anything happens to you within 7 years.
Cite this guide
UK Tax Drag (2026). Helping your adult child start a Lifetime ISA. Parent guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/parent-lisa-for-adult-children.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.