Transferring ISAs

Transferring your ISAs doesn’t affect their tax-efficient status. But you should make sure you don’t have to pay penalties or give up valuable benefits. Tax rules can change in future. Their effects on you will depend on your individual circumstances.

What you’ll learn:

The choice of who you save and invest with is entirely your decision. So if you want to switch from an existing ISA provider to a new one, you’re perfectly within your rights to do so.

However, it’s important to make sure you’re aware of both the risks and benefits of making a transfer. If you’re not sure whether transferring is right for you, seek independent advice.

Benefits of transferring

Transferring your ISAs could allow you to broaden your investment choices, as the range on offer can differ between providers. If, for example, you move to our Smart Investor service, you’ll be able to choose from thousands of funds, stocks and shares, Exchange Traded Funds and investment trusts.

Another reason to switch is that you may find you’re better off because another provider is offering lower fees and dealing commission charges.

You may also want to move because you prefer to keep all your investments in one place, where they’re easier to monitor and manage.

Risks of transferring

Before moving your ISA to a new provider, check that you won't incur any penalties or lose any benefits by doing so.

If you have to sell investments to make a transfer, you may incur a loss if you have fixed-term investments, and you’ll be ‘out of the market’ until you reinvest within your new ISA. And if the market or investment type rises in value during that time, you’ll miss out on the gains. That said, if the market falls, you shouldn’t lose out.

You also may incur dealing charges to sell an investment and then buy it back.

Remember that having sold an investment, you'll miss out on any dividends or other corporate actions and will lose access to any shareholder benefits where you need to be a holder over that period (or lose them completely if they’re no longer available to new investors). If you’re moving between two investment ISA providers, it’s often possible to transfer investments without them being sold. If you opt for this, there’ll be a period during the transfer when you won’t be able to sell existing investment holdings.

How long this period lasts depends on the assets you hold, but it may also be affected by how quickly the broker you’re transferring from can carry out the transfer and whether it’ll accept an order to sell while making the transfer.

There may also be delays in receiving dividends, other income and information, as well as delays to exercising shareholder concessions or receiving notification of voting rights or corporate actions, such as rights issues. These could affect your ability to respond where deadlines are shorter.

How to transfer your ISA

You can transfer your ISA from one provider to another at any time. You can also transfer from one type of ISA to a different type of ISA, for example, you can move money held in a stocks and shares ISA into a cash ISA, or from a cash ISA to a stocks and shares ISA. Similarly, money held in an innovative finance ISA can be transferred into a stocks and shares ISA or into a cash ISA.

Transferring your ISAs won’t affect their tax-free status, as long as you follow the right process. Contact the provider you’ll be moving from and the one you’re moving to, who’ll manage the whole transfer process for you.

To transfer an existing ISA to Barclays Smart Investor, you’ll first need to open an Investment ISA with us.

Once you have an account and are logged in, select the ‘Transfer an ISA’ option from your Online Banking menu.

You’ll need to have with you:

Indicate where asked if you’re transferring from another provider or from another Barclays ISA. You then need to choose whether you want to transfer all or part of the balance of your existing ISA.

Once you have confirmed the details are correct you can leave the rest to us.

If you’re transferring from a cash ISA you currently have with us, the transfer should take less than two days. If the ISA you’re transferring from is one you hold with another provider, it can take up to 15 working days. For investment ISAs, the transfer can take up to 30 days.

Not all ISA providers will accept transfers, however, so check this with the provider you’re hoping to move to. Bear in mind too, that the ISA provider you’re looking to move from might charge you for the transfer, so ensure you check what costs, if any, there could be.

Remember that tax rules can change in future and their effect on you will depend on your individual circumstances.