Skip to main content

Is the Lifetime ISA fit for purpose in 2025? Committee calls for evidence

7 January 2025

The Treasury Committee is asking for evidence on whether the Lifetime Individual Savings Account (LISA) is still an appropriate financial product nine years after it was created. 

Former Chancellor George Osborne introduced the LISA in the 2016 Budget, aiming to provide an alternative method of tax-free saving for retirement while simultaneously encouraging people under 40 to save for a property by offering incentives which could help people get on to the property ladder. 

The product enables people under 40 to open a LISA, and to contribute up to £4,000 each year until they’re 50. At the end of each tax year, this is topped up by a 25% bonus from HMRC. 

Individuals are only able to withdraw their money from the account if they are either buying their first home, terminally ill with less than 12 months to live or aged 60 and over. Withdrawal for any other reason comes with a 25% charge. 

The Treasury Committee is aiming to gather views from the finance industry, consumers and experts. 

As part of this work, MPs are looking for answers to the following questions: 

  1. Is the Lifetime ISA fit for purpose in its current design, including as a combined product for house purchase and pension saving? 
  2. How well do consumers transition between using the Lifetime ISA as a product for house purchase, to then a product for pension saving?   
  3. Given its policy purposes, is the Lifetime ISA value for money for the Government? 
  4. Is the Lifetime ISA a suitable pension savings product? 
  5. Should the Lifetime ISA be abolished? 
  6. Should the Lifetime ISA be reformed to remove the withdrawal penalty? 
  7. Should the Lifetime ISA be restricted to those with no access to a workplace pension? 
  8. Should the Lifetime ISA house price cap be raised in line with inflation, or removed? 
  9. Should the annual Lifetime ISA limit be raised from £4,000? 
  10. Should the Lifetime ISA be reformed in any other way? 

Submissions can be made on the Treasury Committee website. The deadline for submitting evidence is Tuesday 4 February.

Further information

Image: House of Commons