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Parent guide · Tax rules

Savings tax for under-18s — the £100 parental rule

A surprisingly common trap: if you gift cash to your child and it earns more than £100 of interest per parent per year, HMRC treats the interest as yours, not theirs. Junior ISAs and gifts from grandparents sidestep the rule. Here's how it works.

Audience
Parents / grandparents
Reading time
9–11 min read
Topic
Children's savings tax
UK relevance
UK-wide
Tax year
2026/27
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

What this guide covers

UK children pay tax the same way as adults. Most pay £0 only because they earn under £12,570. But the £100 parental rule can pull interest on parental gifts back into the parent's tax. JISAs are immune. Grandparent gifts are immune too. Only direct parental cash gifts trigger the rule.

The starting point: children pay tax like adults

UK tax law makes no special allowance for under-18s. The same allowances and reliefs apply:

For a child earning nothing, all of the above apply on top of each other. A child can theoretically earn up to roughly £18,000/yr from a mix of income types tax-free.

The £100 parental rule explained

If a parent (or step-parent) gives a child cash that is then placed in a savings or investment account, and that account generates more than £100 of interest per parent per year, the entire interest (not just the excess over £100) is treated as the parent's income for tax purposes.

ScenarioWhose tax?
Parent gifts £500, account earns £20 interestTax-free (under £100)
Parent gifts £2,500, earns £100 exactlyTax-free
Parent gifts £2,500, earns £101All £101 added to parent's income
Both parents each gift £2,000, total interest £160 across two accounts (£80 each)Tax-free (each parent's share under £100)
Grandparent gifts £10,000, earns £400 interestTax-free for child — £100 rule doesn't apply

The rule applies per parent, per child, per year across all parental gifts. If you gift cash that ends up in multiple accounts, you have to look at the combined interest.

Why the rule exists

The £100 rule was designed in the 1990s to stop high-earning parents shifting interest income into their children's names. Without it, a 45%-tax-bracket parent could gift £100k to a baby, earn £4,000+ of interest tax-free in the baby's name, and avoid paying any tax on it.

HMRC sees through this. The rule says: cash gifts from parents that generate interest stay attributable to the parent for tax until the child is 18.

The good news. The rule applies only to interest. It does not apply to capital gains. So if a parent gifts £10,000 into a child's S&S account holding accumulating funds (which compound growth via capital appreciation, not income), the growth is the child's for tax purposes.

How to legally sidestep the rule

Three legitimate routes:

  1. Junior ISA. All interest in a JISA is tax-free for the child, regardless of who gifted the money. The £100 rule explicitly does not apply.
  2. Junior SIPP. Same — the pension wrapper makes all returns tax-protected.
  3. Gifts from grandparents (and others). Only the parents’ gifts trigger the rule. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, godparents and family friends can give freely; their interest stays the child's for tax.

So a sensible family strategy:

What to report and to whom

If your child's interest from parental gifts exceeds £100 in a tax year, you (the parent) must include it on your Self Assessment tax return. HMRC doesn't automatically pick this up — the disclosure is your responsibility.

Few parents do this in practice, because:

With Cash JISA rates now at 4–5%, the £2,500 breach point is much lower. Higher-income families with substantial children's savings outside JISAs should review.

HMRC enforcement. HMRC rarely audits this in isolation, but they can and do match data when reviewing parental tax returns. Penalties are 30–100% of the unpaid tax. Easier to use a JISA from the start.
Cite this guide
UK Tax Drag (2026). Savings tax for under-18s — the £100 parental rule. Parent guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/parent-savings-tax-under-18.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.