Eighteen years of compound growth, completely tax-free. A Junior ISA opened at birth is one of the most powerful financial gifts you can give a child — and anyone can contribute.
A Junior Individual Savings Account (JISA) is a tax-free savings account for children under 18 who are UK residents. The annual subscription limit is £9,000 per child per tax year — completely separate from the adult ISA allowance. All growth, dividends, and interest earned inside the JISA are permanently tax-free. The child cannot access the money until they turn 18, at which point it automatically converts into a standard adult ISA and the child takes full control.
The JISA's real advantage is time. Starting at birth gives 18 full years for compound growth to work. The table below illustrates what different monthly contribution levels could grow to by a child's 18th birthday, assuming a 7% average annual return — broadly consistent with long-run global equity index performance, though not guaranteed and not adjusted for inflation.
| Monthly contribution | Total invested over 18 years | Estimated value at 18 | Total growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| £25/month | £5,400 | ~£11,000 | +104% |
| £50/month | £10,800 | ~£22,000 | +104% |
| £100/month | £21,600 | ~£44,000 | +104% |
| £250/month | £54,000 | ~£110,000 | +104% |
| £500/month | £108,000 | ~£220,000 | +104% |
| £750/month (maximum) | £162,000 | ~£330,000 | +104% |
Illustrative only. Assumes 7% annual return compounded monthly, contributions made from birth. Actual returns will vary and can be negative. Investment risk increases with equity allocation.
The comparison between starting at birth versus later is stark. A child whose JISA is opened at birth and receives £100/month could have approximately £44,000 at 18. A child whose JISA opens at age 10 with the same £100/month has only 8 years of growth — and would accumulate roughly £14,000. The same total contribution rate yields three times the outcome simply from the additional years of compounding.
This is why even small, regular contributions from grandparents — perhaps £25 or £50 per month — begun at birth can have a meaningful impact by the time a child reaches adulthood. The amount matters less than starting early.
The JISA is managed by the parent or legal guardian who opens it — they control the investment decisions and any administrative changes. However, anyone can make contributions: parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, family friends. All contributions from all sources count toward the single £9,000 annual limit for that child. It is the responsibility of the account manager to track contributions and ensure the limit is not exceeded.
For grandparents specifically, contributing to a grandchild's JISA can be an efficient form of estate planning. Gifts from individuals are generally exempt from Inheritance Tax if the donor survives seven years from the date of the gift (under the seven-year rule). Regular gifts from income that do not reduce the donor's standard of living may qualify for immediate IHT exemption.
Like adult ISAs, JISAs come in two forms. A Cash JISA earns interest — safe and predictable, but unlikely to materially beat inflation over 18 years. A Stocks & Shares JISA invests in the market — more volatility over short periods, but historically far superior long-run returns over the kind of timescale that a JISA operates on.
With an 18-year horizon, most financial thinking holds that the additional short-term volatility of equities is well compensated by the higher expected long-run return. A global equity index fund within a Stocks & Shares JISA provides broad diversification at minimal cost. That said, the appropriate allocation depends on individual circumstances and risk tolerance — this is not a recommendation.
The child controls the money at 18. Once the JISA converts at age 18, the child has full control and can withdraw or use the funds however they choose — there is no legal mechanism for parents to restrict access. This is worth discussing openly with children as they approach adulthood, and introducing them to investing and financial planning well before they reach the milestone.
Child Trust Funds: Children born between 1 September 2002 and 2 January 2011 may hold a Child Trust Fund rather than a JISA. A child cannot hold both simultaneously. The CTF must be transferred to a JISA before opening one — this is straightforward to arrange with most providers.
Tracking contributions: If multiple family members contribute, maintain a record to ensure the £9,000 annual limit is not inadvertently breached. Excess contributions must be returned by the provider but can cause administrative complications.
The £9,000 JISA allowance is completely separate from the £20,000 adult ISA allowance. Contributions to your child's JISA do not reduce your own ISA subscription capacity. A family of four — two adults and two children — can collectively shelter £58,000 per tax year in ISA wrappers: £20,000 each for the adults plus £9,000 each for the children.
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