The Lifetime ISA (LISA) has long been a product pulled in two directions, part first-time buyer tool, part retirement pot.
Following the Autumn 2025 Budget, the government has announced plans to replace it with a simpler product aimed specifically at first-time buyers, with changes expected to take effect in April 2028.
What is a Lifetime ISA?
A Lifetime ISA allows UK residents aged 18 to 39 to save up to £4,000 a year and receive a 25% government bonus, up to £1,000 annually, on contributions. The funds can be used to buy a first home worth up to £450,000 or withdrawn tax-free from age 60 as a retirement pot.
On the surface, it sounds like a good deal. In practice, there are some significant catches.
The withdrawal penalty
The most serious drawback is the penalty for withdrawing money for any reason other than buying a qualifying home or retiring at 60. The charge is 25%, but it applies to the full account balance, not just the government bonus.
So, if you contributed £4,000, received a £1,000 bonus, and then needed to access the money early, you would face a £1,250 penalty on the £5,000 total, leaving you with just £3,750, less than you originally paid in.
For anyone facing an unexpected change in circumstances, it is an expensive trap.
The property price cap
The second major limitation is the £450,000 cap on the property you can buy using your LISA.
This figure has been frozen since 2017, while house prices, particularly in London and the Southeast, have risen considerably.
In many parts of the country, the cap now excludes a large proportion of available homes, making the LISA far less useful than intended for buyers in higher-cost areas.
What changes are planned?
No immediate changes were announced in the Budget itself. The government is in the process of running a consultation on a new, simpler ISA aimed only at first-time home buyers.
If the timeline holds, a replacement will come into effect from April 2028.
There are reports that any government bonus under a new scheme would be paid at the point of purchase, rather than added to the account over time. That would mean savers miss out on investment growth on the bonus, a factor worth considering if you are thinking about opening a LISA before any changes arrive.
The property price cap is also under review, which will come as a relief to buyers in areas where £450,000 does not stretch very far.
What should you do now?
For the time being, nothing changes. Existing LISAs continue as normal, and new ones can still be opened. Any replacement product will need to pass through a full consultation and parliamentary process.
The sensible approach is to monitor the 2026 consultation and avoid making significant decisions about your LISA until the shape of the new product is clearer.
The bigger picture
The LISA has been in need of reform for some time. The punishing withdrawal penalty, and frozen property cap, have made it more of a headache than a help for many savers.
The government’s decision to replace it is a step in the right direction, but the details will matter.
A well-designed successor with a higher property threshold and fairer penalty rules could make a genuine difference for first-time buyers. A product that simply repeats the same mistakes under a different name would be a wasted opportunity.
Please get in touch to book a free initial discussion with a qualified financial planner if you’d like to discuss further.
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