Why savers should fix NOW as easy-access rates hit two-year low

Savers are being urged by experts to potentially lock away their savings now to secure top rates ahead of a likely Bank of England base rate cut next month.

Easy-access rates have plummeted to a two-year low, according to rates scrutineer Moneyfacts Compare.

The average easy-access rate now stands at 2.68 per cent, the lowest level since July 2023 when it was 2.41 per cent. 

Meanwhile the average easy-access Isa rate is 2.92 per cent, its lowest level since August 2023 when it was 2.86 per cent. 

Atom Bank, offering the top easy-access rate today, cut its rate to 4.6 per cent from 4.75. per cent. 

Many easy-access accounts and Isa access Isas pay north of 4 per cent, but some are artificially inflated by bonus rates with disappear after three to 12 months.

Rachel Springall, finance expert at Moneyfacts Compare says: 'The downward momentum is an inevitable turn of events, with providers adjusting their rates following four cuts to the base rate since last summer.'

Why savers should fix NOW as easy-access rates hit two-year low

Fixed-rate accounts on the other hand are holding strong, with one and two-year bonds seeing the biggest rate hikes in 11 months, according to Moneyfacts Compare.

The top one-year fixed bond rose by the largest amount since August 2024 to 4.55 per cent. 

GB Bank now offers a 4.58 per cent one-year fixed rate bond while the best two-year bond pays 4.45 per cent and is offered by DF Capital. 

The Bank of England will vote on whether to cut or hold the base rate on 7 August with markets pricing in a cut. 

Top fixed-rate accounts

One-year fixed-rate: GB Bank - 4.58%

Two-year fixed-rate: DF Capital - 4.44% 

Three-year fixed rate: GB Bank - 4.42%  

Five-year fixed rate: Birmingham Bank - 4.47% 

One-year cash Isa: Vanquis Bank - 4.3%

Two-year cash Isa: United Trust Bank - 4.25%

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Andrew Hagger, personal finance expert and founder of MoneyComms says: 'A rate cut of 0.25 basis points is still pretty much a certainty even with the economic data published this week.'

In general, savings rates rise when the base rate is rising, and fall when it is falling.

Easy-access rates are usually the first to be slashed when the base rate is cut as savings providers react to the cut, while cuts to fixed-rate bonds tend to move more slowly. 

'Easy-access deals will take a hit - maybe not falling by a full 0.25 per cent in all cases' says Hagger.

'However, with fixed-rate bonds the next cut has probably already been priced in - in most cases,' he adds. 

For this reason Hagger says: 'If you've got some spare cash that you don't need for a year or two then locking some away in a fixed-rate bond makes sense as fixed rates are unlikely to increase from their current levels.'

A saver stashing £10,000 in the top one-year fix offered by GB Bank would earn £458 at the end of the term. 

While a saver putting £10,000 in DF capital's two-year fixed-rate bond would earn £927 at the end of the two year term. 

For savers who want to lock their savings away in a tax-free Isa to avoid paying tax on their savings interest, Vanquis Bank has a one-year fixed rate Isa paying 4.3 per cent while United Trust Bank has a two-year fixed-rate Isa paying 4.25 per cent. 

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