babyworld
Follow us on      Log in | Sign up
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Conception
    • Preparing for conception
    • Diet and nutrition
    • Early signs of pregnancy
    • Infertility
    • Adoption
    • Your Questions
  • Pregnancy
    • Week by week
    • Antenatal care
    • Online antenatal classes
    • Pregnancy complications
    • Glossary of pregnancy terms
    • Exercise
    • Baby loss support
    • Your Questions
  • Labour & birth
    • Am I in Labour?
    • Birth choices
    • Pain relief
    • Multiple births
    • Premature babies
    • Your Questions
  • Baby
    • Newborn baby
    • Feeding your baby
    • Caring for your baby
    • Baby health
    • Weaning
    • Buying for your baby
    • Your Questions
  • Toddler
    • Toddler development stages
    • Feeding your toddler
    • Safety & homeproofing
    • Your Questions
  • Parenting
    • Parenting styles
    • Childcare
    • Money matters
    • Celebrations
    • Family travel
    • Glam Family
  • Community
    • Antenatal clubs
    • Ask our midwife
    • Baby of the month
    • Baby Gallery
    • Competitions
    • Competition winners
    • Groups & forums
    • Member Diaries
    • Members Directory
    • Pregnancy diary of the month
  • Reviews
    • Car seats
    • Pushchairs
    • Maternity products
    • Baby care products
    • Feeding equipment
    • Child safety products
    • Baby travel
    • Apps, DVDs & Toys
    • Family friendly venues
    • Store directory
    • Voucher offers
  • News
ask our midwife

Saving for school fees

Start early and stay flexible are the rules for school fees savings plans. Any savings plan that builds a capital sum can be used as a school fees savings plan.

Some of the plans which are marketed as ‘school fees’ savings plans are often no more
than a series of rather expensive endowments. An endowment has to run for at least 10
years to get value for money, so if you don’t have at least 10 years before the start
of school, don’t even consider an endowment-based plan.

Educational Trusts and Composition Fees, which are paid in advance to the school of
your choice, have some tax advantages, but only if your child eventually goes to the
school you have planned. The rules regarding these types of trusts are complicated and
inflexible.

The best option is saving regularly into an Individual Savings Account (ISA) (offered
by banks, building societies, etc). This has some tax concessions and has no fixed term.
If your child does not go to an independent school, the money is yours to spend as you
please. This is also the best type of plan for university fees.

Take independent advice about the best ISA to use. Different funds are designed for
different purposes. Some are more suited to 5 year investments, others for longer. If you
are serious about saving for school fees you will have to make reasonable contributions,
so it is important to get the best from your savings. If you have less than 3 years before
you will need the money, simply use a deposit account and call it a school fees account.

Click for more topics in Parenting styles, Fee, Financial economics, Individual Savings Account, Investment, Money matters, Personal finance, savings, Taxation in Canada, Tuition.
Bookmark the permalink.
← Baby books : 6 – 12 months :You Choose
Pelvic floor exercises for women →

You May Also Like

  1. random_29 Taking a loan for school fees

    There are several ways of doing this including some specialist school fees…

  2. random_4 Planning for school and university fees
  3. random_26 Paying school fees from income
  • Recent Posts

    • Children not potty trained when they start school
    • Paddington Bear needs you!
    • Why is Vitamin D an important issue in the UK?
    • Vitamins: what do you need, how do you get them?
    • Have a DIY date night at home
  • Recent Comments

    • ahunts on Disney and Corine de Farme Babycare Range
    • Jenn2010 on Disney and Corine de Farme Babycare Range
    • samshore on NEO G Elastic Pregnancy Corset
    • leesa24 on Thomas & Friends – Thomas in Charge! (DVD)
    • Frances on iCandy Cherry
  • Competitions

    Win I Don't Know How She Does It on DVD

    Kate Reddy (Sarah Jessica Parker) devotes her days to her job, at night she goes home to her adoring, recently-downsized architect husband Richard (Greg Kinnear) and their two young children.

    Please Login to take part
    Competition ends 29th Feb 2012
    Terms & conditions
  • Groups

    Newest | Active | Popular
    • Group avatar
      Discuss, Debate and Deliberate
      2,926 members
    • Group avatar
      Trying for a baby
      2,775 members
    • Group avatar
      General pregnancy
      2,411 members
    • Group avatar
      Relationships & sex
      2,185 members
    • Group avatar
      Product talk
      1,874 members
    • Group avatar
      Pregnancy problems
      1,838 members
    • Group avatar
      Living on a budget
      1,774 members
    • Group avatar
      Feeding
      1,428 members
    • Group avatar
      Feeling down
      1,412 members
    • Group avatar
      Labour and birth
      1,380 members
  • About us |
  • Advertising & Media Pack |
  • Contact us |
  • Community |
  • Copyright |
  • Disclaimer |
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2012 Babyworld.co.uk & Glam Media