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Revealed: the best savings accounts on the market right now
The savings accounts with the best interest rates for 2025
The savings accounts with the best interest rates for 2025

Regardless of why you’re saving – for a house, a holiday, your children’s future or as a buffer to cover emergencies – you’ll want to make sure your money is working as hard as possible.

To help you get the most out of your savings, Telegraph Money today launches a range of live “best buy” tables showing the highest rates available across a variety of savings accounts. These tables update automatically every day, with data provided by Savings Data Limited.

Our tables of the best cash Isa rates – whether you want an easy-access, notice, fixed-rate or variable rate account – would be a good place to start for savers looking to make the most of their £20,000 “use or lose it” annual Isa allowance before it renews on April 6. We also list the best Lifetime Isas if you’re saving for a house or your retirement.

If you have already maxed out your Isa, or want to save outside of the tax-free wrapper, we track the best easy-access accounts and interest-paying current accounts.

Those who prefer to save monthly should refer to the table of top-paying regular savings accounts, while savers happy to lock their money up for longer in pursuit of higher returns could benefit from our lists of the best fixed-rate bonds and notice accounts.

We also track the best Junior cash Isas and the best children’s savings accounts for parents putting money away for their family’s futures.

In this article, we will cover:

Why do rates matter?

Seeking out an account with a more competitive interest rate can make a huge difference.

For example, take a savings account paying a relatively low 0.75pc. A saver with £50,000 in this account will earn around £375 a year in interest. Moving the deposit to an account with a better rate can mean a difference of thousands. Take an account at the higher end offering 4.75pc – you’d yield £2,427 a year, an extra £2,052.

Cash loses value over time if it is left in an account that pays less than the inflation rate. At the current inflation rate of 2.8pc, a pot of £1,000 left in a zero-interest account would be worth just £972.76 after a year in real terms, and just £871 after five years. Our inflation calculator can show how your savings are affected.

What is a savings account?

Unlike a current account, which you’ll use to pay your bills and for everyday spending, a savings account is designed to be the place where you can stash your spare money away, where it will hopefully grow over time.