Premium Bonds vs Savings Accounts: Which Is Better in 2025?

If you’re choosing between Premium Bonds and a savings account this year, you’re really choosing between luck-based, tax-free prizes and guaranteed, taxable interest (unless you use an ISA). The right…

Illustration of a pink piggy bank opposite a bank building icon, symbolising Premium Bonds versus savings accounts comparison in 2025.

If you’re choosing between Premium Bonds and a savings account this year, you’re really choosing between luck-based, tax-free prizes and guaranteed, taxable interest (unless you use an ISA). The right answer depends on your tax band, how much cash you hold, and whether you value certainty over the small chance of a bigger win.

As of today, Premium Bonds’ prize fund rate is 3.60% and each £1 bond has 22,000-to-1 odds of a prize in the monthly draw. Top easy-access savings hover around 4.3%–4.8% AER, and easy-access Cash ISAs are around up to ~4.4% (all variable and subject to change). (NS&I Corporate)

Before we dive in, if you want personalised numbers (expected prizes, chance of any win each month/year, when you might reach £50k), try the Premium Bonds Calculator while you read.

How they pay you (and what’s guaranteed)

Premium Bonds (NS&I)

Savings accounts

Cash ISAs

The headline rates today

Rates move; consider this a snapshot, not a promise.

Which is better for you? A practical framework

1) What’s your tax situation?
If you’re additional-rate (PSA = £0) or a higher-rate taxpayer already using your PSA, Premium Bonds’ tax-free prizes become more attractive relative to a taxable easy-access account paying the same headline rate. Meanwhile, a Cash ISA gives guaranteed, tax-free interest but uses your limited ISA allowance—value you might prefer to save for a Stocks & Shares ISA. (YBS)

2) Do you want certainty or don’t mind variance?
Savings accounts (and Cash ISAs) pay what they say. Premium Bonds could pay more or less than the 3.60% average; in any given month you may win nothing. If small, steady interest motivates you, a savings account wins on behaviour. If you like the “prize” element and can tolerate streaks of no wins, Premium Bonds can be a better emotional fit. (NS&I Corporate)

3) How much cash are we talking about?
At small balances, the monthly chance of any win is low; at larger balances the ride smooths out. If you’re near the £50,000 cap, you’ll see frequent small prizes—still with randomness. If you need guaranteed returns on a small pot, savings often look better. For help judging “how big is big,” see Premium Bonds Odds Explained.

4) Do you need your ISA allowance for something else?
Premium Bonds don’t touch your ISA allowance. Using a Cash ISA for cash may crowd out contributions you’d rather put into a Stocks & Shares ISA for long-term growth. Your call depends on your broader plan. (GOV.UK)

Side-by-side at a glance

FeaturePremium BondsEasy-Access SavingsEasy-Access Cash ISA
Return typePrize draw (variable)Interest (variable)Interest (variable)
Current headline (indicative)Prize fund 3.60%~4.3%–4.8% AERup to ~4.4% AER
TaxPrizes tax-freeTaxable above PSATax-free
Uses ISA allowance?NoNoYes (counts toward £20k)
AccessWithdrawableWithdrawableWithdrawable (provider rules vary)
Capital safetyHM Treasury-backedFSCS (provider-dependent)FSCS (provider-dependent)

Sources for rates and rules as cited above. (NS&I Corporate)

Worked examples (quick and realistic)

A) Higher-rate taxpayer with £25,000 in cash

B) Additional-rate taxpayer with £10,000

These are illustrations; plug your numbers and prize-rate assumptions into the Premium Bonds Calculator for a tailored view.

When Premium Bonds tend to look better

When savings accounts (or Cash ISAs) tend to win

A sensible middle path

Plenty of people split their cash:

Keep an eye on moving parts

If you’d like the probability side in plain English, read Premium Bonds Odds Explained, or browse every guide in the Premium Bond hub.

This guide is educational, not financial advice. Rates and rules change—always check NS&I and current best-buy tables before acting.

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