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Retail & Consumer

Brokers and building societies clash over cash ISA cut

The Treasury is working to encourage retail investment in order to boost economic growth, including plans to roll out a "targeted support" scheme before the 2026 ISA season, and rumours of a stamp duty cut on shares to 0.5%

Leading brokers and building societies have clashed over whether the Chancellor should proceed with speculated plans to reduce the cash ISA limit.

The London-based trading platform IG is urging Chancellor Rachel Reeves to act on speculation about cutting the cash ISA allowance to £10,000, following analysis suggesting it could deliver a £7.2bn boost for cash ISA holders who opt to invest their surplus funds.

The Treasury is working to promote retail investment to stimulate economic growth, including proposals to introduce a "targeted support" scheme ahead of the 2026 ISA season, alongside rumours of reducing stamp duty on shares to 0.5 per cent.

However, speculation has centred on plans to reform the ISA system, with the cash ISA ceiling, currently set at £20,000, having faced sustained criticism from industry figures who argue it encourages Britons to stockpile cash rather than transfer it into equities.

The £7bn windfall, as reported by .

IG's research indicates that one third of cash ISA holders – roughly 2.8m individuals – deposit more than £10,000 annually, whilst nearly 30 per cent stated they would invest in stocks and shares if the threshold were reduced.

This could generate potential returns exceeding £7bn over a five-year period, equivalent to over £9,100 per saver.

Michael Healy, managing director of IG, said: "The Chancellor is absolutely right to tackle the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's overreliance on savings, starting with a product that does nothing for long-term wealth creation.