Gransnet forums

Legal, pensions and money

Savings

(105 Posts)
Sikipoo Tue 13-Jan-26 20:48:48

Just curious to know how much money people put by in their retirement. I don’t mean monthly pension payments, just savings for a rainy day.
I simply don’t know how much to put away long term. I am in the fortunate position of having inherited some money , but do I spend or save. I do have a small amount of savings anyway, but wonder the best course of action.

M0nica Wed 21-Jan-26 19:02:00

Cosmos38

And just to add, that is if I can even find a tradesman who can hitherto reply! With so few qualified reliable tradesmen these days I think they must get work by word of mouth recommendation

Both DD and DH & I have recently bought rundown properties in an unfamiliar place. We have had no problem at all finding good relieble tradesmen.

Over the past 4 months I have employed lime plasteres, builders, plumbers, garden clearance contractors, roof and gutter cleaning tradesmen, floor restoration specialists, landscaping contractors

My main source has been, some recommendations, usually from other tradesmen, but mainly Facebook and google. I use Trustpilot and recommendations on Facebook.

I am a smiling friendly employer who treats tradesmen in my house the way I would treat a friend in my house. I produce regular cups of tea/coffee and chat to them, but not enough to stop them working.

At the moment with the cosntruction industry, especially housing construction in a slump, there are a lot of good tradesmen around looking for work as self employed tradesmen.

meanwhile, I need to send the man who is coming to repair my washing machine the cost of the spare parts. I always pay promptly the agreed sum without complaint.

Cosmos38 Wed 21-Jan-26 12:54:07

And just to add, that is if I can even find a tradesman who can hitherto reply! With so few qualified reliable tradesmen these days I think they must get work by word of mouth recommendation

Cosmos38 Wed 21-Jan-26 12:51:20

The only reason I have savings is because I live on my own in the large family house which is in need of repairs and renovation because I cannot face the prospect of trying to find reputable tradesmen who are prepared to quote for work within about 6 months

Allira Wed 21-Jan-26 11:27:06

I too love checking the Pbs every month
Me too. It's my one gambling vice!

karmalady Wed 21-Jan-26 08:48:06

I have PBs, also I think at an overall 3% and thats ok, as it is tax-free.

7 years ago I decided to give my dgc £20k of premium bonds each, now out of IHT. They have all done well and any winnings are automatically re-invested. They are all well aware that the stipulation (within the bounds of reality) is for the sum to go towards mortgage deposit. Better that than a random sum left to them in my will. Thay are now aged between 16 and 18 and sensible, with a good future

I too love checking the Pbs every month

CariadAgain Tue 20-Jan-26 20:04:31

I've not even managed that interest rate on premium bonds! I keep telling myself it can't be much longer before I get enough to give me "real" interest on them to date and there is the chance I'll get a big win somepoint.

I'm a Capricorn - I've come to the conclusion we're made to wait and wait and wait some more and finally get something years after other people do - grr! We just about have to stand there and wave our fist very threateningly at the Universe with "Everyone else in my circle gets x by y age - so why am I still having to wait?"

Though everyone I know/know of in this agegroup owns their own home and, except in one case, it's mortgage-free (in that case I think her husband hadnt been as good as he should have been with money and so she informed him in no uncertain terms they were moving here in order to be able to buy a house again (albeit with a mortgage) and made it plain she was so livid to not be a home-owner (when they had been previously and he'd lost it) that he'd better start packing. He knew it was more than his life was worth for them to go into retirement without her getting her home ownership back again - so he started packing.

crazyH Tue 20-Jan-26 18:25:02

I had £40000 in PBs. I worked out that last year, the winnings only gave me something like 3 %
So, I took out £30000, split it between my 3 children. I left £10000 and assumed that my chances of winning, will be the same, knowing my luck 😂

Allira Tue 20-Jan-26 17:39:17

Usedtobeblonde

I have a decent balance in my current account for immediate emergencies, a small amount in a BS which doesn’t need notice and the rest in PBs.
At my age I like the frisson of excitement each month “just in case” and actually had a decent return last year.
It suits me, if no one else.

It suits me UTTB.

The interest rate can be as good as many other safe savings accounts and, very occasionally, exceed anything else.

Allira Tue 20-Jan-26 17:37:12

They don’t really slump as if it’s unexpected. They are clearly marketed as term investments paying a fixed rate of interest, usually for a year

Well, I do know that Graphite.
But changing from 6.25% to 1% interest is a slump in rates imo. It may not be the technical term.

The bank used to write to remind savers it was coming to the end of the term but no longer. Mea culpa for not remembering and so I lost about 10 days' interest.

blue25 Tue 20-Jan-26 17:21:00

Spend it. Maybe save a little, but life is for living and experiences are the way to go before you’re too old or ill to go anywhere or do anything. Die With Zero is a great book & my new motto, so I’m spending & enjoying life while still able to.

Usedtobeblonde Tue 20-Jan-26 15:12:29

I have a decent balance in my current account for immediate emergencies, a small amount in a BS which doesn’t need notice and the rest in PBs.
At my age I like the frisson of excitement each month “just in case” and actually had a decent return last year.
It suits me, if no one else.

V3ra Tue 20-Jan-26 15:05:28

Our current regular saver will mature in July, a couple of weeks before we need to pay the balance of our winter holiday 😎

Cabbie21 Tue 20-Jan-26 13:10:27

When they are about to mature, that’s the time to see what be Regular Savers are available. With the Bank of England lowering interest rates we are unlikely to find high interest rates now. A 5% fixed rate is worth getting. There are higher ones but most are variable and can be expected to drop.

Norah Tue 20-Jan-26 12:59:58

Graphite

They don’t really slump as if it’s unexpected. They are clearly marketed as term investments paying a fixed rate of interest, usually for a year - no different to bonds and ISAs and other fixed term accounts. The Terms & Conditions always explain what will happen at the end of the term, usually that the money will be transferred to a low yielding account. It’s a prompt to review what to do with the money next.

The institution is taking a risk in offering a fixed rate which is why you will be offered lower rates on longer term fixes. They may still prove very good if interest rates come down.

I do similar to karmalady, open a high interest account each year that I put a regular monthly amount into. Because it’s only simple interest calculated at a daily rate and not credited until the end of the year and the amount which can be saved each month is limited, it isn’t going to yield much, but better than a mattress or a tea caddy and a good way to budget for next year’s bills.

£200 a month, £2,400 a year at 6.5% will pay just under £85. At 7%, just over £91.

Agreed.

One receives x% for the year, well explained in the terms and conditions.

Graphite Tue 20-Jan-26 12:05:12

They don’t really slump as if it’s unexpected. They are clearly marketed as term investments paying a fixed rate of interest, usually for a year - no different to bonds and ISAs and other fixed term accounts. The Terms & Conditions always explain what will happen at the end of the term, usually that the money will be transferred to a low yielding account. It’s a prompt to review what to do with the money next.

The institution is taking a risk in offering a fixed rate which is why you will be offered lower rates on longer term fixes. They may still prove very good if interest rates come down.

I do similar to karmalady, open a high interest account each year that I put a regular monthly amount into. Because it’s only simple interest calculated at a daily rate and not credited until the end of the year and the amount which can be saved each month is limited, it isn’t going to yield much, but better than a mattress or a tea caddy and a good way to budget for next year’s bills.

£200 a month, £2,400 a year at 6.5% will pay just under £85. At 7%, just over £91.

Allira Tue 20-Jan-26 10:53:19

karmalady

Allira

karmalady

The best savings, for me, are the regular savers at high interest. I try to do at least one a year, to finish in january the next year. Principality christmas reg saver again this year, £150 in pm at 6.5%. That does me very nicely and pays the bills which come during february

You have to be on the ball with those, though, because usually there is a limit on how much you can save each month and the interest rate might be very attractive for the twelve month term but then slumps to practically nothing at the end of the term.

Allira principality got in touch with me several times, to say the account was due to mature. The money transferred to my halifax current account on the day principality matured

The nationwide reg saver slumped but again I did get notice

I only have one reg saver this year, everyday living is too expensive for anything else now

I did log on to Lloyd's and realised, karmalady.
They used to write but all communications are online now.

6.25% for the Regular Saver slumped to 1% after the 12 month term

Cabbie21 Tue 20-Jan-26 10:50:05

The best ones pay over 7%.
Keep an eye on the dedicated thread on MSE Regular Savings Accounts in their Forums. That’s the website Martin Lewis set up.

karmalady Tue 20-Jan-26 06:59:58

Halifax have a reg saver at 5.5%. I managed to do 8 months last year and the maximum is £250 pm. I managed to do 8 months last year but it was too much of a stretch, wasn`t worth it for the overall interest

karmalady Tue 20-Jan-26 06:54:10

Allira

karmalady

The best savings, for me, are the regular savers at high interest. I try to do at least one a year, to finish in january the next year. Principality christmas reg saver again this year, £150 in pm at 6.5%. That does me very nicely and pays the bills which come during february

You have to be on the ball with those, though, because usually there is a limit on how much you can save each month and the interest rate might be very attractive for the twelve month term but then slumps to practically nothing at the end of the term.

Allira principality got in touch with me several times, to say the account was due to mature. The money transferred to my halifax current account on the day principality matured

The nationwide reg saver slumped but again I did get notice

I only have one reg saver this year, everyday living is too expensive for anything else now

V3ra Tue 20-Jan-26 06:41:31

We both have a monthly saver associated with our current account with Santander.
It runs from July each year and we can each pay in £200 a month.
The interest rate for the 25/26 year is 5%.
When it matures the total is automatically transferred into the current account and a new monthly saver starts.
Very simple and straightforward.

Allira Mon 19-Jan-26 22:19:18

Cabbie21

Not too much work. Set up a Standing Order to pay in the monthly amount. You get notification before it matures so you can cash it in and put the money somewhere else.

You only get a message online so best to make a note in your diary or on your phone.

Cabbie21 Mon 19-Jan-26 22:10:05

Not too much work. Set up a Standing Order to pay in the monthly amount. You get notification before it matures so you can cash it in and put the money somewhere else.

Allira Mon 19-Jan-26 14:00:20

karmalady

The best savings, for me, are the regular savers at high interest. I try to do at least one a year, to finish in january the next year. Principality christmas reg saver again this year, £150 in pm at 6.5%. That does me very nicely and pays the bills which come during february

You have to be on the ball with those, though, because usually there is a limit on how much you can save each month and the interest rate might be very attractive for the twelve month term but then slumps to practically nothing at the end of the term.

Norah Mon 19-Jan-26 13:28:07

Aveline

Stocks and shares ISAs do extremely well if carefully managed. Mine is 34% up from this time last year.

Agreed.

ISAs do well tax sheltering investments, helping money grow more efficiently. Our return was less at 31% which beats inflation!

Aveline Mon 19-Jan-26 12:02:44

Stocks and shares ISAs do extremely well if carefully managed. Mine is 34% up from this time last year.