Premium Bonds prize winnings are tax-free — they don't count toward the £1,000 Personal Savings Allowance, don't trigger Self Assessment, and don't appear in income tax bands. The 2026/27 prize fund rate is around 4.40% per year, meaning the total prize pot equals 4.40% of total Premium Bonds in circulation. But individual returns vary widely — small holdings often win nothing for years; large holdings (£40k+) tend to approach the prize fund rate. The cap is £50,000 per person.
How the prize draw works
Each £1 Premium Bond gets one entry into a monthly prize draw. The prize fund is set by NS&I's prize fund rate (currently 4.40%). For 2026/27, that's roughly £2.40 of prizes per £1,000 of bonds per month — but distributed unevenly:
- Most prizes are £25 (the minimum) or £50.
- Two £1m monthly jackpots.
- Mid-tier prizes of £100, £500, £1,000, £5,000, £10,000, £25,000, £50,000, £100,000.
The mean (4.40%) is the prize fund rate. The median for typical retail holdings (£10k–£25k) is below the mean — most years you'll receive less than 4.40%; occasionally you'll win a larger prize that pulls your long-term average back up.
The effective rate for different holding sizes
| Holding | Expected annual prizes (mean) | Realistic median return |
|---|---|---|
| £1,000 | ~£44 | £0–£25 in most years |
| £5,000 | ~£220 | £75–£175 in most years |
| £10,000 | ~£440 | £250–£425 in most years |
| £25,000 | ~£1,100 | £750–£1,100 in most years |
| £50,000 | ~£2,200 | £1,500–£2,200 in most years |
The variance shrinks as the holding grows. £50k holdings typically realise within 70–100% of the prize-fund rate; £1k holdings frequently realise 0%.
When Premium Bonds beat alternatives
Compare £50,000 in Premium Bonds vs alternatives:
| Option | Gross rate | Tax | Net (basic rate) | Net (higher rate) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Premium Bonds | 4.40% | Tax-free | £2,200 | £2,200 |
| Best easy-access Cash ISA | 4.50% | Tax-free | £2,250 | £2,250 |
| Best easy-access savings | 4.80% | 20% / 40% above PSA | £2,140 (after PSA) | £1,536 (after PSA) |
| 1-year fixed at 5.0% | 5.00% | 20% / 40% above PSA | £2,200 (after PSA) | £1,600 (after PSA) |
Cash ISA wins outright if you have allowance available. Premium Bonds compete with non-ISA accounts for higher-rate taxpayers above PSA (because non-ISA interest is taxed at 40%).
The £50,000 cap and joint holdings
The maximum Premium Bonds holding is £50,000 per person. Married couples can each hold £50k = £100k household total. Joint Premium Bonds are NOT possible — each holding is in one name.
For households wanting to put more than £100k tax-free into NS&I, the options are:
- NS&I Direct Saver / Income Bonds (taxable interest, no FSCS limit because state-backed).
- Multiple Cash ISAs (£20k/year each — different banking groups for FSCS spread).
- Index-linked Savings Certificates (currently closed to new investors).
Inheritance and Premium Bonds
Premium Bonds form part of the deceased's estate for IHT purposes — they're not exempt. The estate retains the bonds for 12 months after death (so they can continue to win prizes for the beneficiaries), then they must be cashed in.
FSCS — not relevant for NS&I
Premium Bonds are issued by NS&I, which is backed by HM Treasury — i.e. the UK government. They don't fall under FSCS because they're not at risk of provider failure. This makes NS&I attractive for savings above the £120,000 FSCS limit per banking group.
Common mistakes
- Treating the prize fund rate as a guaranteed return. It's the mean, not the median. Small holdings rarely achieve it.
- Holding small amounts long-term. £1k in Premium Bonds for 10 years often returns < £50 total. Cash ISA wins.
- Forgetting prizes are calendar — not received. Prizes paid into your NS&I account between draws still count for HMRC's records — though they're tax-free anyway, the records matter for your own bookkeeping.
- Not increasing the holding to £50k. Higher-rate taxpayers with cash beyond ISA limits often under-allocate to Premium Bonds.
Sources and methodology
Premium Bonds rules follow NS&I's product terms. Tax-free status comes from the Income Tax Act 2007 and Sec 39 of the National Loans Act. The methodology page documents sources.
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