Premium Bonds Strategy: Drip-Feeding vs Lump Sum Investment

When you decide to put money into Premium Bonds, you face a simple but surprisingly important choice: do you put in a lump sum all at once, or drip-feed money…

Illustration of a pink piggy bank with a watering can dripping coins on one side and a large coin being inserted on the other, representing Premium Bonds strategies of drip-feeding vs lump sum investment.

When you decide to put money into Premium Bonds, you face a simple but surprisingly important choice: do you put in a lump sum all at once, or drip-feed money in over time? The difference comes down to how quickly your balance grows, how many entries you have in the prize draw along the way, and how comfortable you are with parting with cash upfront.

If you want to test both approaches with your own numbers—monthly contributions vs. one-off lump sum—the Premium Bonds Calculator shows exactly how your pot builds and when you might hit the £50k maximum.

The basics of how entries work

Every £1 bond is one entry into the monthly prize draw. The more bonds you hold, the higher your chance of winning prizes in each draw.

The long-term outcome averages out close to the prize fund rate either way—but your experience along the journey can differ.

The lump sum approach

How it works: You place a large amount (say £10,000 or £50,000) into Premium Bonds right away.

Pros

Cons

Example:
£20,000 lump sum gives you 20,000 entries from the first month. With odds of 22,000-to-1 per bond, your monthly chance of any win is ~60%. Over a year, you’d expect ~11 wins.

The drip-feeding approach

How it works: You contribute gradually (e.g., £500 a month). Your bond count grows steadily, and so does your chance of winning.

Pros

Cons

Example:
£500 per month = £6,000 invested by the end of year one. Average balance during that year is ~£3,000, giving you ~1.6 expected wins—not many. By year five you’d be closer to a steady rhythm, but you missed out on earlier prize chances.

Head-to-head comparison

FeatureLump SumDrip-Feeding
Immediate oddsHigh (all entries working from day 1)Low at first, grows over time
Cash flowBig upfront commitmentManageable monthly amounts
Behaviour“All in” psychologyHabit-building, gradual
Expected total returns (long run)Slightly higher, since you had more entries earlierSlightly lower, since fewer entries early
Risk of regretIf prize rate drops soon after, all money exposedOnly part exposed in early months

When lump sum makes sense

When drip-feeding makes sense

The hybrid strategy

Some savers do a hybrid: a lump sum to get a base level of entries, plus drip-feeding on top. For example:

This smooths cash flow, gets you into the draw early, and helps you build toward £50k without the shock of a single large deposit.

The £50k cap and reinvestment

Remember, once you hit £50,000 you can’t add more. If you’ve ticked “reinvest winnings,” NS&I will automatically stop reinvesting once you reach the ceiling.

See What Happens If You Max Out Premium Bonds? for what life looks like at the top.

Behavioural angle: which suits your personality?

Neither is “better” universally. The maths slightly favours lump sums (more entries earlier), but psychology often favours drip-feeding. The best strategy is the one you’ll stick to.

Final takeaway

To see the difference with your own numbers, test both paths in the Premium Bonds Calculator.

And for the bigger picture of whether Premium Bonds make sense at all in 2025, start with Are Premium Bonds Worth It in 2025?.