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Junior ISA (JISA): the complete parent guide

A Junior ISA is a long-term tax-free savings wrapper for children under 18. The £9,000 annual contribution limit, the irreversible age-18 control transfer, the choice between Cash and Stocks & Shares variants, and how a JISA compares to a bare trust or pension contribution all matter for the eventual amount your child receives. This is the 2026/27 mechanic, the limits, and the family-specific decisions to weigh.

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What you need to know: Junior ISA (JISA): the complete parent guide

Quick answer: A Junior ISA (JISA) lets parents (and others) save up to £9,000 per child per tax year in a tax-free wrapper. The money is locked until the child's 18th birthday, at which point the child gains full legal control. JISAs come in two flavours: Cash JISA (interest-bearing, low risk) and Stocks &…

Key points:

A Junior ISA (JISA) lets parents (and others) save up to £9,000 per child per tax year in a tax-free wrapper. The money is locked until the child's 18th birthday, at which point the child gains full legal control. JISAs come in two flavours: Cash JISA (interest-bearing, low risk) and Stocks & Shares JISA (invested, potential for higher long-term returns). A child can hold one of each at any time. The £9,000 annual allowance is shared between them — not £9,000 in each.

The rules in plain English

Cash JISA vs Stocks & Shares JISA

The Cash version pays interest (rate set by the provider). The S&S version invests in funds, ETFs, or other approved assets. For a long time horizon (18-year child has 0 years until age 18 — bad time horizon; newborn has full 18 years — best time horizon), the S&S JISA historically beats Cash JISA by 3–5% per year in real returns.

Years to age 18Cash JISA (3% / yr)S&S JISA (5% real / yr)
1 year+3%+5%
5 years+16%+28%
10 years+34%+63%
18 years+70%+141%

For a child under 13, S&S almost always wins for long-term wealth. For a child 16+, Cash is more appropriate (volatility risk too high near withdrawal).

The age-18 transfer problem

At 18, the child has legal control over the JISA. They can withdraw the entire balance, spend it on anything, and there's nothing parents can legally do to stop them. For a JISA grown to £40,000+ by age 18, this is a meaningful concern.

Two ways to mitigate:

JISA vs bare trust vs SIPP for children

JISA isn't the only way to save for a child. The three main options:

JISABare trustJunior SIPP
Annual limit£9,000No limit (but gift IHT considerations)£2,880 (grossed to £3,600)
Tax treatmentTax-free growth + withdrawalChild's tax allowance + bands applyTax-free growth, taxable on withdrawal
Control at 18Child has full controlChild has full controlLocked until age 57+ (rising)
Government top-upNoneNone25% basic-rate relief
Best forHouse deposit, universityLarger family wealth, flexibilityLong-term retirement seeding

Many families use a combination: JISA for short/medium-term goals, Junior SIPP for ultra-long-term retirement seeding, bare trust for tax-efficient legacy wealth above the JISA cap.

Worked example — full £9k per year from birth

£9,000 a year into an S&S JISA, 5% real return, 18 years

Total contributions over 18 years£162,000
Estimated growth (5% real, compounding)~£89,000
Estimated JISA value at age 18~£251,000

For a typical UK family, £9k/year per child from birth is unrealistic — that's £750/month. More common patterns: £100–£300/month, sometimes topped up by grandparents at birthdays. Even £100/month from birth (£21,600 contributions over 18 years) compounds to ~£35k at age 18 at 5% real returns.

Common mistakes

Sources and methodology

Rules and limits above follow HMRC's JISA guidance. Returns and projections use long-run historical UK equity returns (around 5% real per year over rolling 18-year windows). For a personalised calculation, see the LISA calculator (Lifetime ISA equivalent for over-18s). The methodology page documents sources.

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