How to Transfer an ISA in the UK (Without Losing Your Tax Benefits)
You can transfer an ISA from one provider to another without losing its tax-free status โ but only if you use the formal ISA transfer process. If you withdraw the money yourself and re-deposit it elsewhere, that usually counts as a new subscription and can use up part of your annual ISA allowance. This guide shows you how to transfer safely, when it makes sense, and which platforms are worth considering.
ISA transfer rules and provider policies can change. Always verify the current process directly with your new provider before initiating a transfer.
- Yes, you can transfer an ISA โ between providers and between ISA types, subject to provider support
- Official ISA transfers do not count as new subscriptions โ so your money keeps its tax-free wrapper when moved correctly
- Always use the new provider's transfer process โ never withdraw and re-deposit manually
- Cash or in-specie โ you can transfer as cash (investments sold first) or in-specie (holdings moved directly), depending on provider support
- Partial transfers may be possible โ including for current tax year subscriptions, but not all providers support them
When Does an ISA Transfer Make Sense?
Transferring an ISA is not always worth the hassle, but it can be a smart move in the right situation.
- Your current platform's fees are too high โ switching from a 0.35% platform to a lower-cost provider on a ยฃ50,000 ISA can save meaningful money every year
- Your current platform no longer fits your portfolio โ you may have started with a simple platform but now want funds, investment trusts, bonds, or a SIPP alongside your ISA
- You want to consolidate multiple ISAs โ bringing older ISAs together can make your portfolio easier to manage
- Your portfolio has grown โ at higher balances, flat-fee platforms can become more competitive than percentage-fee providers
- You want a better user experience โ if your platform is clunky or frustrating, you're less likely to stay on top of your investing
Best Platforms for ISA Transfers
Not all providers support transfers in the same way. Some accept cash transfers only for certain accounts, while others also support in-specie transfers for eligible holdings.
| Platform | Accepts transfers in? | Cash / in-specie | Platform fee | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trading 212 | Yes | Cash and in-specie | 0% | Low-cost stock and ETF transfers |
| InvestEngine | Yes | Cash and in-specie (supported holdings) | 0% | ETF-focused transfers at low cost |
| Interactive Investor | Yes | Cash and in-specie | ยฃ11.99/month | Larger portfolios, broad investment range |
| AJ Bell | Yes | Cash and in-specie | 0.25%/year | Fund and trust portfolios, broader choice |
| Hargreaves Lansdown | Yes | Cash and in-specie | 0.35%/year | Full-service transfers and wider support |
Transfer policies vary by account type and provider. Always check the receiving platform's current transfer support before applying.
How to Transfer an ISA โ Step by Step
The new provider handles the transfer. Your job is to choose the right platform, complete the form correctly, and avoid doing anything manually with the money.
Choose your new platform
Check the fee structure, whether it accepts transfers in, and whether it supports your current holdings if you want an in-specie transfer. See our ISA platform comparison.
Open your new ISA account
You need an active account with the receiving provider before the transfer can begin. If you have not opened it yet, use our step-by-step ISA opening guide.
Complete the transfer request with the new provider
Give your existing ISA provider details, account reference, and specify whether you want a cash or in-specie transfer if both are available.
The new provider contacts your old provider
The receiving platform manages the process directly. In most cases you should not need to close anything manually.
Wait for the transfer to complete
Cash transfers are usually faster than in-specie transfers. Timings vary by provider and the assets being moved.
Check everything has landed correctly
Confirm the cash balance or holdings match what you expected. If anything looks wrong, raise it with the new provider immediately.
Cash Transfer vs In-Specie Transfer
These are the two main ways an ISA can move between providers.
๐ฐ Cash transfer
- Your investments are sold at the current provider
- Cash is moved to the new platform
- You reinvest once the money arrives
- Usually simpler and more widely supported
- You may be out of the market during the transfer
๐ฆ In-specie transfer
- Your investments move across without being sold
- You stay invested during the transfer
- Usually better for larger portfolios
- Only works if the new platform supports the same holdings
- Often takes longer than a cash transfer
Transfer Timelines and Fees
| Transfer type | Typical timeline | Market exposure gap | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cash transfer | Usually around 2โ4 weeks | Yes โ while cash is in transit | Most common and usually simplest |
| In-specie transfer | Often longer than cash transfer | No | Depends on the assets and both providers' systems |
| Cash ISA โ Stocks & Shares ISA | Often around 2โ4 weeks | Yes โ until you invest the cash | Always moves as cash by nature |
Fees to check before you move
- Transfer-out or exit fees โ some platforms charge per holding or per line of stock/fund
- Any dealing charges on sale โ relevant if the current platform sells investments as part of a cash transfer
- Ongoing platform fee savings โ compare the one-off cost to move against the annual saving you expect after switching
Common ISA Transfer Mistakes
- Withdrawing and re-depositing manually โ this is the biggest mistake and can turn the money into a fresh ISA subscription
- Ignoring exit fees โ a transfer is less attractive if the fee saving takes years to recover the one-off cost
- Assuming every provider supports in-specie โ support varies by platform and by holding
- Not checking whether the new platform offers your investments โ if it does not, you may be forced into a cash transfer
- Assuming all partial transfers are allowed โ the rules are broader now, but providers may still impose their own limitations
- Failing to follow up on delays โ if the transfer drags on well past the provider's stated timeline, chase it