Premium Bonds are marketed as a safe, fun alternative to savings accounts: your money’s backed by the government, and instead of interest you get a shot at tax-free prizes. On the surface it feels like there’s no downside. But look closer, and a handful of hidden risks start to show up—risks that explain why some holders are disappointed after years in the draw.
For a clearer sense of whether Premium Bonds fit your situation, try the Premium Bonds Calculator. It doesn’t just project your balance; it also models your odds of winning and how streaks of bad luck might affect you.
Risk 1: Inflation silently eroding your pot
Premium Bonds protect your capital, but not its purchasing power.
- If the prize fund rate is 3.60% and inflation runs at 4%, the “average” holder is slowly falling behind.
- Unlike savings accounts or gilts, Premium Bonds don’t promise to track interest rate changes quickly. When inflation spikes, NS&I adjusts prize rates cautiously.
That means your “safe” £10,000 may buy less each year—even if you do pick up a few £25 wins along the way.
Risk 2: The lottery effect of dry spells
At small balances, odds are stacked against you. With £1,000 in bonds, your monthly chance of any win is under 5%. That means long streaks of nothing are normal—not unlucky.
This randomness carries a hidden behavioural cost: people assume “the system is broken” or that they’re “due a win.” In reality, the maths says dry streaks happen all the time.
The Premium Bonds Odds Explained article unpacks this in more detail, but the key is: unless you have tens of thousands invested, don’t expect regular wins.
Risk 3: Opportunity cost versus bank accounts
At the same time that Premium Bonds are paying an average 3.60%, many easy-access savings accounts in September 2025 are offering around 4.5%+ AER.
- A basic-rate taxpayer with room in their Personal Savings Allowance may earn more, after tax, in a simple savings account.
- Even higher-rate taxpayers might come out ahead in a Cash ISA, where interest is tax-free but guaranteed.
This is the hidden cost: by holding Premium Bonds, you’re effectively paying for the chance of a jackpot with the certainty of a lower expected return.
See our side-by-side comparison in Premium Bonds vs Savings Accounts: Which Is Better in 2025?.
Risk 4: Misunderstanding “big wins”
Most holders think “big” means a £1m jackpot. In practice:
- With 50,000 bonds (the maximum), your chance of any prize in a given month is high (~91%), but jackpots remain astronomically rare.
- Realistically, “big” for most people is a steady trickle of £25s, with the occasional £50 or £100.
Chasing jackpots can cause you to overweight Premium Bonds in your portfolio, sidelining investments with genuine long-term growth. For the actual maths, see How Much Do You Need in Premium Bonds to Win Big?.
Risk 5: Tax trade-offs aren’t always obvious
Yes, Premium Bond prizes are tax-free, but…
- If you’re a basic-rate taxpayer with unused PSA, your savings interest may already be tax-free, making the Premium Bond advantage disappear.
- If you’re a higher-rate or additional-rate taxpayer, Premium Bonds look more attractive. But don’t forget: a Cash ISA also offers tax-free certainty, and uses up ISA allowance (which you may want for stocks and shares).
It’s easy to miss these nuances if you only see the “tax-free prizes” marketing headline.
Risk 6: Behavioural traps and false expectations
Premium Bonds play on psychology:
- Jackpot dreams make people think they’ll “strike it big,” when the probability is closer to lightning strikes.
- Win stories are publicised by NS&I, but the much larger number of “no win” months for most holders aren’t.
- Reinvestment can give the illusion of compounding—your balance grows, but only up to £50k, after which you’re capped.
These traps can leave savers both disappointed and over-exposed, especially if they’ve sidelined other useful vehicles like ISAs, pensions, or even high-yield accounts.
Risk 7: The £50,000 ceiling
Once you max out, you can’t buy more bonds. Your expected prizes plateau around the prize fund rate—no matter how long you hold.
That’s not inherently bad, but it means Premium Bonds can’t scale beyond £50k. For larger portfolios, they’re just one piece of the cash allocation. If you’re nearing the ceiling, see What Happens If You Max Out Premium Bonds? (£50,000 Holding Explained).
Final thoughts
Premium Bonds aren’t “bad”—but they come with risks most people don’t talk about: inflation eating into real value, long losing streaks, the opportunity cost of better rates, and jackpot psychology that distorts expectations.
If you use them, use them knowingly: as a safe, liquid place for some cash with a tax-free upside, not as your whole savings strategy.
To test what those risks mean for your own situation, run your numbers in the Premium Bonds Calculator. Then explore the full Premium Bond hub for comparisons, odds, strategies, and payout dates.

