Savings & Investing

How Junior ISAs Work

How UK Junior ISAs work — annual allowance, tax-free growth, who can contribute, and what happens when your child turns 18.

Verified against GOV.UK — Junior Individual Savings Accounts on 16 Feb 2026 Updated 16 February 2026 4 min read
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Summary

A Junior ISA (JISA) is a tax-free savings or investment account for children under 18 in the UK. Parents, grandparents, or anyone else can contribute up to £9,000 per tax year (2025/26). All growth — interest, dividends, and capital gains — is completely tax-free. At 18 the account automatically converts to an adult ISA and the money belongs to the child.

How it works

A child can hold up to two Junior ISAs: one Cash JISA (earns interest) and one Stocks & Shares JISA (invested in funds/shares). The combined annual contribution limit across both is £9,000.

Key rules:

  • Only a parent or guardian with parental responsibility can open the account (for children under 16)
  • Children aged 16–17 can open their own Junior ISA
  • Anyone can contribute — parents, grandparents, family friends
  • Money is locked until the child turns 18 (no withdrawals except terminal illness)
  • At age 16, the child can become the registered contact and manage the account
  • At age 18, the JISA automatically converts to an adult ISA
  • Unused allowance cannot be carried over between tax years
  • A child cannot hold both a Junior ISA and a Child Trust Fund

The formula

The calculator projects growth using annual compounding with end-of-year contributions — a conservative model since it assumes money is added at the end of each year rather than throughout.

Value at 18 = Σ (balance × (1 + r − f) + C) each year

Where

balance= Account balance at start of each year (£)
r= Expected annual return rate (e.g. 0.05 for 5%)
f= Annual fee rate (e.g. 0.005 for 0.5%)
C= Annual contribution, capped at £9,000

Equivalently, for a pure annuity (no initial deposit, no fees):

FV = C × ((1 + r)ⁿ − 1) / r

Where

FV= Future value at maturity (£)
C= Annual contribution (£)
r= Annual return rate (decimal)
n= Number of years (18 minus child's current age)

Worked example

£100/month from birth at 5% return, no fees

1

Annual contribution

£100 × 12 = £1,200/year

= £1,200

2

Years to maturity

18 − 0 = 18 years

= 18

3

Future value (annuity formula)

£1,200 × ((1.05¹⁸ − 1) / 0.05) = £1,200 × 28.132 = £33,759

= £33,759

4

Total contributed

£1,200 × 18 = £21,600

= £21,600

5

Investment growth

£33,759 − £21,600 = £12,159

= £12,159

Result

Your child receives £33,759 at 18 — and £12,159 of that is free growth

The annual allowance

Tax yearAnnual limit
2025/26£9,000
2024/25£9,000
2023/24£9,000
2022/23£9,000
2020/21 onwards£9,000 (raised from £4,368)

The £9,000 limit is shared across Cash and Stocks & Shares JISAs. For example, if you put £3,000 into a Cash JISA, you can contribute up to £6,000 to a Stocks & Shares JISA in the same tax year.

Inputs explained

  • Child’s age — current age (0–17). Determines the number of years until the JISA matures at 18.
  • Initial deposit — a lump sum to start with (up to £9,000, the annual limit).
  • Monthly contribution — regular monthly amount. The calculator annualises this and caps at the £9,000/year allowance.
  • Expected annual return — the assumed annual growth rate. Typical assumptions: 2% (cash), 5% (conservative equity), 7% (historic stock market average).
  • Annual fees — platform and fund management fees, deducted from growth. Typical range: 0.15% (Vanguard LifeStrategy via iWeb) to 1.5% (actively managed funds on legacy platforms).

Outputs explained

  • Value at 18 — projected JISA balance when the child turns 18
  • Total contributed — sum of initial deposit plus all annual contributions
  • Investment growth — total growth earned on the balance (gross, before fee deduction)
  • Fees paid — total fees deducted over the investment period
  • Growth multiple — how many times your contributions have multiplied (e.g., 1.56× means 56% growth)
  • Daily equivalent — monthly contribution expressed as a daily amount, to make it feel more tangible

Assumptions & limitations

  • Annual compounding — growth is calculated once per year. Real investments fluctuate daily, but annual compounding is standard for long-term projections and is slightly conservative.
  • End-of-year contributions — contributions are modelled as being added at the end of each year. Real monthly contributions would produce slightly higher returns due to intra-year compounding.
  • Constant return rate — a fixed annual return is assumed. In reality, stock market returns vary significantly year to year. The projection shows an average-case scenario.
  • Constant fee rate — fees are assumed to be a fixed percentage of the balance. Some providers charge flat fees (e.g., £9.99/month) which would affect smaller pots more.
  • No inflation adjustment — the projected value is in nominal terms. To estimate real (inflation-adjusted) purchasing power, subtract 2–3% from the expected return.
  • Allowance assumed constant — the £9,000 limit is assumed to remain unchanged. HMRC may adjust it in future budgets.

What happens at 18

When the child turns 18:

  1. The Junior ISA automatically converts to an adult ISA
  2. The money belongs to the child — they have full control
  3. They can keep it invested, transfer to a different provider, or withdraw
  4. All growth remains tax-free within the ISA wrapper
  5. The converted amount does not count towards their adult ISA allowance for that year

Verification

Test caseInputExpected value at 18Our resultSource
Basic monthly saving£100/m, age 0, 5%, 0% fees£33,759£33,759Annuity formula
With fees£100/m, age 0, 5%, 1.5% fees£29,400£29,400Manual calculation (net rate 3.5%)
Lump sum + monthly£5k + £200/m, age 5, 6%, 0.75% fees£52,918£52,918Lump sum FV + annuity FV

Sources

junior-isa jisa savings child-savings tax-free