ISA vs SIPP: Which Account Saves You More Tax?
Two of the most powerful tax-saving tools available to UK investors — but most people use neither properly. Here's the plain English breakdown of how ISAs and SIPPs actually work, and which one is right for you.
Key takeaway: An ISA shelters your money from tax when you take it out. A SIPP saves you tax when you put money in. They work best together — but if you can only use one, your choice depends on when you need the money.
What is a Stocks & Shares ISA?
An ISA (Individual Savings Account) is a tax wrapper. Money inside an ISA grows completely free of UK tax — no Capital Gains Tax, no Income Tax on dividends. You can invest up to £20,000 per tax year across all ISA types.
The key benefit is simplicity: you can withdraw your money whenever you want, with no tax bill. There's no minimum age, no lock-in period. You put money in, it grows tax-free, you take it out whenever you like.
- Annual allowance: £20,000 (2026/27 tax year)
- Tax on growth: none
- Tax on withdrawal: none
- Access: any time
- Who can open one: UK residents aged 18+
What is a SIPP?
A SIPP (Self-Invested Personal Pension) is a pension you manage yourself. The government adds tax relief to every contribution — meaning a basic rate taxpayer investing £80 gets £100 added to their pension automatically. Higher rate taxpayers can claim even more back via Self Assessment.
The trade-off: you can't access the money until you're 57 (rising to 58 in 2028). It's specifically for retirement.
- Annual allowance: up to £60,000 (or 100% of your earnings, whichever is lower)
- Government top-up: 20% basic rate, 40% higher rate
- Tax on growth: none
- Tax on withdrawal: 25% is tax-free; the rest is taxed as income
- Access: from age 57 (2026)
Side-by-side comparison
| Feature | Stocks & Shares ISA | SIPP |
|---|---|---|
| Annual limit | £20,000 | £60,000 |
| Government top-up | None | 20–45% tax relief |
| Tax-free growth | Yes | Yes |
| Tax-free withdrawal | Yes (all of it) | 25% only |
| Access | Any time | Age 57+ |
| Best for | Medium-term goals | Retirement |
Real numbers: which saves more?
Let's use a real example. You want to invest £800 per month for 25 years, earning an average of 7% per year. You're a basic rate (20%) taxpayer.
📊 ISA scenario — investing £800/month
📊 SIPP scenario — contributing £800/month (costs you £640, govt adds £160)
The SIPP wins on cost-efficiency for a basic rate taxpayer — you got the same £648,000 pot, but it only cost you £192,000 out of pocket vs £240,000 for the ISA. The ISA wins on flexibility and simplicity at withdrawal.
Who should use which?
✓ Use an ISA if...
- You might need the money before age 57
- You're saving for a house, car, or medium-term goal
- You want maximum flexibility
- You're a non-taxpayer or low earner (tax relief matters less)
- You want simplicity
✓ Use a SIPP if...
- You're saving specifically for retirement
- You're a higher or additional rate taxpayer
- You want to maximise the government's contribution
- You earn over £50,000 and pay 40% tax
- You have maxed your ISA allowance
The smart move for most people: Use both. Max your ISA first (£20,000/year) for flexibility, then put additional savings into a SIPP for retirement. Most UK adults never come close to either limit, so this rarely means choosing one over the other.
Our verdict
ISA for flexibility. SIPP for retirement. Use both if you can.
For most people under 40, an ISA is the right starting point — you get tax-free growth without locking your money away. Once you're contributing regularly and thinking seriously about retirement, add a SIPP to take advantage of the government's tax relief top-up. Higher rate taxpayers should prioritise the SIPP first.
Platforms that offer both:
Freetrade — ISA + SIPP → Hargreaves Lansdown →Affiliate disclosure: ClearYield may earn a commission if you open an account via our links, at no extra cost to you. Tax treatment depends on individual circumstances and may change. This is not financial advice.