# ISA vs LISA vs Pension: Which Is Best for Your First Home Deposit?

> Saving for a first home? We compare Cash ISAs, Lifetime ISAs, and pensions head-to-head — with real 2026 figures, government bonuses, and tax implications explained.

*Section: Personal Finance — By Rachel Stone (Personal Finance Editor) — Published June 5, 2026 — 5 min read*

Canonical URL: https://dailyjunction.org/business-finance/isa-vs-lisa-vs-pension-first-home-uk
Tags: first home, LISA, ISA, pension, savings, UK property, deposit

## Key takeaways

- A Lifetime ISA (LISA) gives you a 25% government bonus on up to £4,000 per year — up to £1,000 free annually — but can only be used for a first home under £450,000 or retirement.
- A Cash ISA offers tax-free interest with no withdrawal restrictions, making it the most flexible option but with no government bonus.
- Using pension savings for a first home is generally not permitted — the money is locked until age 57 (rising to 58 in 2028), with narrow exceptions.
- For most first-time buyers, the LISA is the strongest dedicated tool, but it comes with a 25% withdrawal penalty if used for anything other than a qualifying home or retirement.

Saving for a first home deposit is one of the biggest financial challenges a UK adult can face. The average first-time buyer deposit in early 2026 sits at roughly £30,000–£35,000 according to the Nationwide House Price Index, and that number is significantly higher in London and the South East. Every pound you save counts — so choosing the right account for those pounds matters enormously.

Three vehicles dominate the conversation: the **Cash ISA**, the **Lifetime ISA (LISA)**, and — somewhat controversially — the idea of using a **pension** for a house deposit. This guide compares all three with real 2026 figures so you can make an informed choice. *This is general information, not financial advice.*

## What is a Cash ISA?

A **Cash ISA** is a savings account where all interest earned is tax-free. In the 2026–27 tax year, the annual ISA allowance remains at £20,000, meaning you can deposit up to that amount across all ISA types combined.

The key features:
- Interest is tax-free regardless of your tax band.
- You can withdraw your money at any time with no penalty.
- There is no government bonus — you earn only the interest the account pays.
- Best-buy easy-access Cash ISAs in June 2026 offer roughly 4.00–4.50% AER, though these rates can change.

The Cash ISA is the most flexible option — your money is accessible, tax-efficient, and carries zero penalty risk. The downside is that it offers no additional boost beyond the interest rate.

## What is a Lifetime ISA (LISA)?

A **Lifetime ISA** is designed specifically for two purposes: buying a first home or saving for retirement. You can open one between ages 18 and 39, and you can contribute up to **£4,000 per tax year** until age 50.

The headline feature is the **25% government bonus** — paid monthly on contributions. Put in £4,000 and the government adds £1,000, giving you £5,000. Over four years of maximum contributions, that is £16,000 of your money becoming £20,000 with £4,000 of government bonus.

The rules for using a LISA for a first home:
- The property must cost **£450,000 or less**.
- You must be a first-time buyer.
- You must use a conveyancer or solicitor to handle the purchase.
- The LISA must have been open for at least 12 months before you use it.

If you withdraw for any other reason before age 60, you pay a **25% penalty** on the amount taken out. This reclaims the bonus and a slice of your own contributions — you could get back less than you put in.

## What about using a pension?

The short answer is: **you generally cannot use a pension to buy a first home**. Defined contribution pensions cannot be accessed before age 57 (rising to 58 in 2028 under current legislation). There is no first-home exception, no hardship withdrawal for a deposit, and no mechanism to borrow against a pension for a house purchase.

The only circumstances in which pension funds might be accessed early are serious ill-health claims, which require medical evidence and meet strict HMRC criteria. For a healthy person saving for a home, a pension is not a viable deposit vehicle.

That said, a workplace pension remains an essential part of long-term financial planning — employer contributions and tax relief make it a powerful retirement tool. But it is not a house-deposit tool, and treating it as one would be a mistake.

## Head-to-head comparison

| Factor | Cash ISA | Lifetime ISA | Pension (DC) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Government bonus | None | 25% on contributions up to £4,000/year | Tax relief at marginal rate (20%/40%/45%) |
| Annual contribution limit | £20,000 (shared across ISAs) | £4,000 (counts towards ISA allowance) | £60,000 (or 100% of earnings if lower) |
| Access for first home | Yes, any time | Yes, after 12 months, property ≤ £450k | No — locked until 57 (58 from 2028) |
| Penalty for early withdrawal | None | 25% on amount withdrawn | Cannot access early (except ill health) |
| Tax on growth | Tax-free | Tax-free | Tax-free growth; 25% tax-free lump sum at retirement |
| Best 2026 rate | ~4.00–4.50% AER (easy access) | Cash LISA: ~4.00–4.25% | Depends on investments chosen |
| Flexibility | High — access anytime | Low — penalty for non-qualifying use | Very low — no access until minimum pension age |

## Who each suits

### Cash ISA suits:
- Savers who want maximum flexibility and may need to access their money before buying.
- Those who have already used their £4,000 annual LISA allowance and want additional tax-free savings.
- First-time buyers who are uncertain about whether they will buy within the UK or within the £450,000 LISA cap.
- People who value simplicity — no forms, no conveyancer requirements, no penalty risk.

### Lifetime ISA suits:
- First-time buyers who are certain they will buy a qualifying property within the UK.
- Savers under 40 who can commit to locking money away until a home purchase or retirement.
- Anyone who wants the government to add 25% to their savings — a return that is hard to match elsewhere without investment risk.
- Couples who can each open a LISA, effectively doubling the bonus to £2,000 per year.

### Pension suits:
- Long-term retirement savers — not first-home buyers.
- Employees who benefit from employer pension contributions, which effectively represent free money.
- Higher-rate taxpayers who gain 40% or 45% tax relief on contributions, making pension saving extremely efficient for retirement.

## Practical strategy: combine them

For many first-time buyers, the optimal approach is to use both a LISA and a Cash ISA:

1. **Max out the LISA first.** Contribute £4,000 per tax year to capture the full £1,000 government bonus. This is the highest guaranteed return available to savers.

2. **Put additional savings into a Cash ISA.** Once the £4,000 LISA limit is reached, a Cash ISA keeps further savings tax-free and accessible.

3. **Check the £450,000 LISA price cap.** If you are buying in an area where typical first homes exceed £450,000 — parts of London, for example — the LISA may not be usable. In that case, a Cash ISA is the safer choice.

## The bottom line

For a first-time buyer saving for a deposit, the **Lifetime ISA is the standout product** — a 25% government bonus is genuinely unmatched. But it comes with strings: the £450,000 property cap, the 12-month waiting period, and the penalty for non-qualifying use. A **Cash ISA** offers full flexibility with no bonus, making it the right choice for savers who are unsure about their timeline or target property. A **pension**, despite its tax advantages, is not a house-deposit vehicle and should not be treated as one.

The best approach for most people is to max out a LISA each year and direct any surplus into a Cash ISA — capturing the government bonus while keeping the rest of your deposit accessible and tax-free.

## Frequently asked questions

### Can I use a Lifetime ISA and a Help to Buy ISA together?

No. The Help to Buy ISA closed to new applicants in November 2019, though existing accounts can still receive contributions until November 2029. You cannot use the government bonus from both a Help to Buy ISA and a Lifetime ISA on the same house purchase — you must choose one. The LISA bonus is generally larger because the annual contribution limit is higher.

### What happens if I withdraw from a LISA for a non-qualifying reason?

You pay a 25% withdrawal charge on the amount withdrawn. Because the government bonus was 25% on contributions, the charge effectively reclaims the bonus plus a portion of your own money — you could get back less than you put in. The charge was temporarily reduced to 20% during 2020–2021 but returned to 25% from April 2021.

### Can I access my pension to buy a first home?

Almost certainly not. Defined contribution pensions cannot be accessed before age 57 (rising to 58 in 2028), and there is no first-home exception. The only route would be a serious ill-health claim. A pension is not a house-deposit vehicle.

## Sources

- [GOV.UK — Lifetime ISA](https://www.gov.uk/lifetime-isa)
- [MoneyHelper — Saving for a home](https://www.moneyhelper.org.uk/en/homes/buying-a-home/saving-for-a-deposit)
- [HMRC — ISA statistics 2025–26](https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/individual-savings-account-statistics)

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