logo
How first-time buyers are getting a £50,000 lifetime ISA boost revealed – but there's a catch

How first-time buyers are getting a £50,000 lifetime ISA boost revealed – but there's a catch

Independent21-05-2025
First-time buyers are increasingly utilising Lifetime ISAs (Lisas) to bolster their deposits, with some contributing over £50,000 towards their property purchase in 2022-23, according to HMRC data obtained by money app Plum.
Designed to support both first-time homeownership and later-life savings, Lisas offer a significant government bonus. An analysis of authorised withdrawals – those eligible for the bonus – revealed that the top 25 Lisa withdrawals for home purchases averaged £51,000 during the last financial year.
The data further highlights the growing popularity and impact of Lisas. Over 42,800 withdrawals for home purchases were for at least £10,000, with over 11,200 exceeding £20,000.
The Lisa scheme allows individuals to save up to £4,000 annually until age 50, receiving a 25 per cent government bonus on their contributions, capped at £1,000 per year. This incentive makes Lisas an attractive option for those looking to step onto the property ladder.
If savers make withdrawals for any other reason than buying their first home or saving for later life face a withdrawal charge of 25 per cent.
And there is another crucial catch: if someone is using a Lisa for their first home, the property must cost £450,000 or less.
Rajan Lakhani of Plum, which is offering a 4.75 per cent Lisa rate, said: 'Against a backdrop of recent global volatility it's reassuring to know the Lifetime Isa can deliver stunning gains, regardless of the broader economic outlook.
'And don't forget that this Government boost comes in addition to any interest you earn on savings.'
As part of its Lisa launch, Plum has created a digital tool to give savers an indication of how long it could take them to build the deposit necessary for a starter home in their desired postcode.
Speaking to MPs earlier this year, money expert Martin Lewis criticised the Lisa's property price condition, calling it a 'major hole.' This is because, as house prices rise, more first-time buyers are looking to purchase properties over this threshold. But in this scenario, they must give back the 25 per cent 'interest' from their Lisa.
This creates a major issue, he told Treasury Committee in February: 'Many people think that if you add 25 per cent and take off 25 per cent you get back to where you started. You don't. You end up with 6.25 per cent less than where you started.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Firms call for interest rate cuts as taxes bite
Firms call for interest rate cuts as taxes bite

Daily Mail​

time44 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Firms call for interest rate cuts as taxes bite

Business leaders last night urged the Bank of England to press ahead with interest rate cuts this week. The heads of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) and Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) told the Daily Mail that now was the time to lower borrowing costs to ease pressure on companies and households struggling despite four rate cuts since last August. They also warned firms have been clobbered by Rachel Reeves' £25billion National Insurance tax raid on employers. Fears are mounting of more tax hikes this autumn to plug a gaping hole in the Chancellor's Budget plans. A report by the Institute of Directors last week showed business confidence has collapsed to a record low under Labour, with morale lower than during Covid lockdowns. Interest rates are expected to be cut from 4.25 per cent to 4 per cent on Thursday – though with inflation well above the 2 per cent target and the highest in the G7 at 3.6 per cent, the CBI warned the Bank is 'walking a tightrope'. Alpesh Paleja, deputy chief economist at the CBI, said: 'We expect a rate cut and then two more after that, so that rates settle at 3.5 per cent early next year. 'However, interest rates rank fairly low in the spectrum of costs. Firms continue to grapple with the rise in employer NICs, high energy costs and more general uncertainty. 'The cumulative burden is something the Government needs to be mindful of, as we head closer to the next Budget.' David Bharier, head of research at the BCC, said small firms in particular 'are increasingly impatient for more cuts'. He added: 'Interest rate cuts are only part of the solution right now. For many SMEs, the cost of doing business is too high with new tax and administrative burdens. To restore business confidence and stimulate investment, a comprehensive growth plan is essential.' Martin McTague, chairman of the FSB, said: 'Small firms will be hoping for a cut to ease some of the financial pressure they are under and enable more of those who need finance to grow to access it. 'If no cut is forthcoming, the Bank should set out a clear path for the rest of the year, building in a gradual easing of the base rate to encourage investment and unlock growth.'

Labour must come up with a deterrent that makes migrants worry their money won't get them what or where they want
Labour must come up with a deterrent that makes migrants worry their money won't get them what or where they want

The Sun

time44 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Labour must come up with a deterrent that makes migrants worry their money won't get them what or where they want

Boats sailed WHEN will the Government finally get the message on illegal immigration? Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's announcement of 300 extra National Crime Agency officers to tackle people-smuggling gangs is welcome, of course. 1 Anything that disrupts this evil trade is a good thing, in the same way that a crackdown is needed on profiteers who employ the migrants on the cheap — no questions asked — when they get here. But if this £100million investment is the Government's grand plan to 'break the business model' of the crooks then it is doomed to failure. When the risk-versus-reward equation is so much in their favour, the smugglers and the illegal migrants will always find a way. The incentives are too great: millions of pounds for the smugglers, for little effort; hand-outs, accommodation and black market jobs for the migrants, with virtually no chance of being deported. The only way to break the business model is to come up with a deterrent which makes the migrants worry that their money — and the dangers they will face — won't get them what they want. Or where they want. A deterrent like the Rwanda scheme, which was already beginning to work but which Labour couldn't wait to ditch. The soaring number of Channel small boats is the inevitable consequence. Jobs shame THE number of young people facing unemployment is one of the most heart-breaking results of the Chancellor's job-wrecking tax hikes. A million Neets — youngsters Not in Education, Employment or Training — is a disaster for the economy as well as a tragedy for them. Migrant boats are carrying 'bad people' REJECTED by other NATIONS says Trump At a time in their lives when they are desperately trying to find their place in the world, a job — or the skills to get one — gives them purpose and a sense of who they are, just as surely as being dumped on benefits crushes that. The Skills Tax Relief proposed by more than 100 business chiefs would be a vital boost to apprenticeships and vocational training, offering young Brits a route into the workplace. If Rachel Reeves isn't swayed by the thought of saving so many from the scrapheap, then she should be swayed by the £10billion of welfare savings it could bring over the next five years. It's not the water temperature that puts them off but the sewage dumped in it. What a blow for our coastal communities and seaside resorts.

Gen Z's perfect time to dine? Bookings for 6pm are booming
Gen Z's perfect time to dine? Bookings for 6pm are booming

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Gen Z's perfect time to dine? Bookings for 6pm are booming

This summer, one London restaurant is introducing a £50 early evening set menu aimed at the growing crowd of purposeful post-work diners. 'It's a more accessible experience that still reflects our standards,' said Joe Laker, the co-founder and head chef at Counter 71 in Shoreditch, London. 'It's a more relaxed way to unwind.' And Laker isn't alone. Across the country, restaurants are adapting to meet demand from customers who want to eat earlier. Fashionably late is out — in 2025, it's the early diners who are first to the fork. Data from OpenTable, the online restaurant reservation service, reveals a sharp rise in 6pm reservations, up 11 per cent in London and 6 per cent across the UK compared with the same period last year. Zonal, the hospitality tech service, pegs the new national average dining time at 6.12pm, with nearly half of all bookings falling between midday and 6pm. Laker's new £50 menu at Counter 71 includes snack highlights from its long-form dinner, a main course focused on whole chicken and 'playful' desserts. But it's more than a menu shift — it's a response to a cultural change. 'Many of our guests now live further out than before,' Laker says. 'They want to eat early so they're not sprinting for the last train.' What began as a post-pandemic adjustment is now reshaping the way we eat out, pushing restaurants to overhaul their service models and menus, while diners swap late-night indulgence for early evening sobriety. Commuters and wellness-focused professionals are driving the shift in attitudes, along with the sober-curious and cost-conscious — and the restaurant industry is taking note. According to Lucia Reisch, a professor of behavioural economics from the University of Cambridge, Covid was a pivotal moment. 'People who work from home tend to start and finish earlier, which naturally leads to earlier dining. Add the lack of a commute, and people have far more flexibility,' she said. 'There's also now broader public awareness that late-night eating isn't great for health.' It's not just about health, although wellness is a major factor. 'Younger diners especially are making choices that reflect physical and mental wellbeing, but also financial health,' said Dr Richard Piper, the chief executive of Alcohol Change UK. 'Earlier dining helps avoid expensive late-night drinking — people want to socialise without the hangover.' That sentiment is echoed by Laura Willoughby, the co-founder of the low and no-alcohol specialist Club Soda. 'This isn't about being virtuous. It's about making the most of the week — whether that's getting to the gym early or having a quiet dinner midweek and saving bigger nights out for the weekend.' For Aamena Hanif, a London-based professional who frequently dines out, the draw is less logistical and more personal. 'I've started booking dinner around 6pm because the vibe just suits me better,' she said. 'I don't drink, so I'm not looking for a buzzy atmosphere. Early evenings are calmer. You can actually hear your friends talk.' Restaurants are already responding. At Sael, a private dining room in St James's Market, London, the chef and restaurateur Jason Atherton says the early prix fixe menu has proved popular. 'People are commuting farther and want to get home earlier — and health is a big factor,' Atherton said. 'Before the pandemic, we'd be plating main courses at midnight. Now, most of our venues close well before that.' Outside London, earlier dining is also gaining traction. At Fifty Two at the Rudding Park Hotel in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, Sunday dinner now starts at 6pm sharp — a response to guest preferences. 'Eating out is becoming a way to socialise without compromising other goals,' said Linda Haden of the hospitality analysts Lumina Intelligence. 'We're seeing more smoothies and fewer cocktails on dinner tables.' Peter Backman, a restaurant analyst, believes 6pm bookings now reflect something deeper. 'Dining at 6pm signals the end of the workday. It's not just about food — it's about reclaiming time,' he said. Andrew Oswald, an economics and behavioural science professor at the University of Warwick, agreed. 'Londoners had the longest commutes in the UK. The pandemic broke the psychological mould. People had time to realise they didn't want to arrive home at 9pm any more. I doubt they'll go back.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store