Savings Projection · 2025
£7,500.00 Savings — What It Could Grow To
A single deposit of £7,500.00 with no further contributions could grow to £12,216.71 over 10 years at a 5% annual return. The table below shows projections at three realistic UK rates.
Projected balance from £7,500.00
| Annual return | 5 years | 10 years | 20 years |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3% p.a. | £8,694.56 | £10,079.37 | £13,545.83 |
| 5% p.a. | £9,572.11 | £12,216.71 | £19,899.73 |
| 7% p.a. | £10,519.14 | £14,753.64 | £29,022.63 |
Compound interest applied annually, no additional contributions, no charges or tax modelled. 3% reflects a typical easy-access savings rate, 5% a long-run bond-heavy portfolio, and 7% a long-run equity-heavy portfolio (nominal, before inflation).
Wrap it in an ISA
UK adults have a £20,000 ISA allowance for the 2025/26 tax year. Interest, dividends and capital gains inside an ISA are entirely tax-free, which can make a meaningful difference on £7,500.00 over 10–20 years compared with a taxable General Investment Account.
If you are aged 18–39 and saving for a first home (up to £450,000) or for retirement, a Lifetime ISA adds a 25% government bonus on contributions up to £4,000 a year — that is up to £1,000 free per tax year. The LISA allowance counts towards the £20,000 overall ISA limit.
Beyond £20,000 you can use a pension wrapper for tax relief at your marginal rate, or fill a partner's ISA to double household tax-free saving to £40,000 per tax year.
Is £7,500.00 the right emergency fund?
A common rule of thumb is to hold 3–6 months of essential expenses in instant-access cash before investing for the long term. UK household essentials (rent/mortgage, bills, food, transport) typically run £1,500–£2,500 a month, so a £5,000–£15,000 emergency buffer covers most workers. Anything above that buffer can sit in a stocks-and-shares ISA, pension or higher-yielding fixed-term savings.