For an anniversary which was about thirteen weeks ago, would it be more advantageious to do this ... or this
These are quite messy to work out, I was fiddling with a spreadsheet there...
It looks to me like you always win if you leave the Regular Saver open but take out the max amount you can and transfer it elsewhere (assuming you have another account paying about 5%).
The nearer you are to your next account anniversary, the more you gain.
Yorky if I assume:
- you had €10K in the account on the last anniversary which was 3 months ago
- this includes your first monthly contribution of the year, which went into your account on the same day as the anniversary
- you contribute €750 per month to the account
- you can earn 5% interest on money you transfer out of the regular saver into a "lump sum account"
Then (all figures gross of DIRT and APPROXIMATE
):
(1) Leaving the account open and unchanged you'll get €645 interest over the year
(2) Closing the account now, transferring the balance to the "lump sum account", and paying the monthly contribution to the "lump sum account" instead, you'll get €632 interest over the year
(3) Leaving the account open and continuing to pay the monthly contribution, but transferring €12240 now to the "lump sum" account, you'll get €737 interest over the year.
(4) Doing option three, but transferring a further €3000 out of halifax to the "lump sum account" in four months' time, you'll gain another €12, giving you €749 over the year.
Don't intend doing these figures again but you get the idea
EDIT: just to illustrate how sneaky this condition is though; someone similar to Yorky whose anniversary was 10 months ago would lose almost €500 (gross) by closing outright, i.e. choosing option (2). This is what halifax are hoping you'll do, so don't do it... you have been warned!