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You might like to consider ploughing some of the money that may be spent at Christmas and birthdays, on expensive, soon to be forgotten, plastic toys into a high interest account instead. A great number of these toys make quite a feature of expensive, excessive packaging - which you are paying for. This may sound a boring option, but money invested now can be used in the future for further education, University or to form the basis of a nest egg for your children at some, as yet, unspecified time and purpose. It will come as a pleasant surprise and will be far more lasting than any plastic toy would be. Here are some tips that might prove useful.
1. Parents who cannot afford to risk losing any money should stick with the safety of cash, using a savings account. 2. Child accounts may pay higher interest on lower balances, but it is worth checking the rates on normal accounts, particularly if you are saving on a regular basis. 3. Fill in an R85 form to make sure any interest on a child’s account is paid in full, without tax deducted.
5. Consider asking relatives and friends to top up tax efficient Child Trust Funds. Available to all infants born on or after 1st September, 2002, to the maximum of £1,200 a year. The money is then tied up until the child’s 18th birthday. 6. Parents who prefer to keep the money under their own control, and hand it over when they choose, might prefer to use their own individual savings account (ISA) allowances to invest up to £7,000 a year in stock market assets. Or up top £3,000 a year earning tax free interest in a mini cash Isa, with the potential to put a further £4,000 in a mini equity Isa. Source: The Daily Telegraph. Custom Search According to research from The Children’s Mutual, the average child is receiving £85 at Christmas and one in five receiving more than £100. Faced with the generosity of grandparents, godparents and other relatives and friends, a safe home needs to be found for these sums. It would be madness to fritter away money like this that could be put into a safe home to increase in value. Child friendly accounts suitable for longer term saving include Halifax Children’s Regular Saver account, Yorkshire Building Society’s Treasure Bond and the latest issue of Nottingham Building Society Children’s Regular Saver account. Interest rates are no longer quoted here due to fluctuating conditions in the banking market. Most child accounts are not available to children over the age of 16 years, but several accounts are open to older children and can be useful for teenagers and students. One such account is the Saffron Building Society’s V4 account, which can be held up to the age of 23 years. If you are investing money for your children over a longer term then interest rate is what you should be looking at rather than just easy access, because this becomes increasingly important as the balance grows. Also, postal, telephone and Internet options may prove to be crucial in getting a higher rate of interest. More useful information on money and your bank account is at your finger tips. As your children grow older it may well be advisable to guide them towards saving money and securing their student possessions. Far better to be safe than sorry.
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