Why making your second ISA million is 2.5 times easier than your first

Laith Khalaf
24 February 2025
  • It takes 25 years of saving £1,433 a month to build up a £1 million ISA
  • But it only takes a further 10 years to make it to the £2 million mark
  • After 12 years of saving £1,433 a month, your annual fund growth is already matching the £17,196 you’re saving each year
  • The magic of compound growth applies whether you’re targeting an ISA pot of £1 million, £100,000 or £10,000
  • Getting 2% less annual growth could mean you spend an extra five years hitting your target

Laith Khalaf, head of investment analysis at AJ Bell, comments:

“It’s no walk in the park to build up a million pound ISA, but once you get there, hitting new milestones becomes increasingly easy because you have a huge tailwind from growth on the money you’ve already stashed away. Happily, the helping hand of compound growth doesn’t just affect those with more than a million pounds clocked up; the same dynamic plays out no matter how much you’re saving each month.

“Compound growth is a formidable force, though you do have to be diligent and patient to harness its power. Clearly the higher the return you achieve on your investments, the more powerful the effect of compound growth on your wealth. Over the long term, a cash saver is therefore likely to see a weaker compounding effect than an investor putting their money into the stock market, though the latter will of course see greater fluctuations in the value of their holdings along the way. Those who are holding too much cash for the long term may well be doing themselves a disservice and making it more difficult to meet their financial goals.

“The effect of compound growth can also be compromised by any tax you pay on your investments. But the £20,000 annual ISA allowance means you can stash up to £1,666 a month into a tax shelter, where your investments can grow free from both income tax and capital gains tax. So any tax paid on savings up to this amount is effectively voluntary.”

The making of a million pound ISA

“It takes 25 years of saving £1,433 a month to build up a million pound ISA, assuming you get 6% growth on your investments. That’s clearly a pretty punchy amount to be able to put away from your monthly income, but once you get to the million pound mark, getting to your second million is much easier. Based on continuing to save the same £1,433 a month in an ISA, it would take less than 10 further years to get to your second million. That’s because as well as the money you’re saving each month, you’re also getting growth on the first million pounds you’ve stashed away. For most of us the million pound ISA is a distant dream, but the same dynamic works whether you’re building towards a savings pot of £1 million, £100,000 or £10,000.

“Compound growth is a wonderful thing when you break it down. Even to reach your first million pounds in 25 years, you would only need to save less than half of this sum, or £429,900, because the remainder would be made up by growth on the savings you make (assuming 6% net fund growth).

“Indeed after 12 years of saving £1,433 a month, your annual fund growth is already exceeding the £17,196 you’re putting away each year. This effect gets turbocharged the more you save, because of the growth on the pot of money you’ve already built up. This explains why it only takes 10 years, rather than 25 years, to save your second million. In other words, it’s 2.5 times easier to save your second ISA million than your first.

“This is reflected in the amount you need to save as well. To get from £0 to £1 million in 25 years you need to stump up £429,900. But to get from £1 million to £2 million by saving £1,433 a month, you would only need to stash away £171,960 yourself. Over a decade of saving, you would receive £859,189 in growth, because not only are your new savings growing, but so is the million pounds you’ve already built up in your ISA.

Source: AJ Bell, based on 6% net fund growth per annum. Numbers do not add to round millions as they have been calculated based on whole years of saving.

“Feeling a bit greedy all of a sudden? Well, to get to your third million would only take a further six years of saving £1,433 a month. During this time you would only need to stump up £103,176 in savings, with £874,067 accruing in fund growth. In total that means 41 years of saving £1,433 a month to get to £3 million. If you are in the fortunate position to be able to do that, over the course of those 41 years, you would have stashed away £705,036, with the remaining £2,303,414 coming from fund growth (the combined total slightly exceeds £3 million as we are working in whole years of saving).”

You don’t have to be a millionaire to enjoy the benefits of compound growth

“£1,433 is an extremely large amount of monthly savings to be able to set aside, no doubt. But the magic of compound growth applies whatever your target nest egg is.

“For instance, to build up your first £100,000 over 25 years would require monthly savings of £143.30, and if you carried on at this pace of contributions, you’d hit the £200,000 mark within a further 10 years, and £300,000 within an additional six years. In total over 41 years, you would have saved £70,504 yourself, with a further £230,341 coming from fund growth (again the combined total adds to just over £300,000 as we have calculated them using whole years of saving).”

Source: AJ Bell, based on 6% net fund growth per annum

Growth makes a big difference

“The level of growth you get does impact the time it takes to build up your nest egg. Our examples above assume 6% growth, but if you only get 4% growth – a level more in line with long run cash rates – then it would take you 30 years to build up £1 million from a monthly saving of £1,433, not 25 years. It would then take another 14 years to hit the £2 million mark. That’s 44 years in total to hit £2 million with 4% growth compared to 35 years at 6% growth. Conversely, if you received 8% growth on your investments, then you would hit the £1 million mark after 22 years and the £2 million mark after a further eight years (30 years in total).

Source: AJ Bell

“Some investors may wish to take a more cautious approach with their long-term savings, though if they do so they should recognise there is a trade-off here. A more conservative approach will mean less volatility, but will likely mean hitting your financial goals requires more time or a larger amount of monthly savings.

“The same goes if you pay tax on your investments. We’ve assumed in the examples above there is no tax to pay on investment returns, which is the case within an ISA wrapper. A £1,433 monthly saving equates to £17,196 a year, which falls neatly within the annual ISA allowance of £20,000, so it’s possible for savings at this level to be free from income tax and capital gains tax. Only if your savings exceed £20,000 a year do you need to pay tax on them, provided you’ve made the most of your ISA allowance.”

Laith Khalaf
Head of Investment Analysis

Laith Khalaf started his career in 2001, after studying philosophy at Cambridge University. He’s worked in a variety of roles across pensions and investments, covering both the DIY and the advised sides of the business. In 2007, he began to focus on research and analysis, and has since become a leading industry commentator, as well as a regular contributor to the financial pages of the national press. He’s a frequent guest on TV and radio, and for several years provided daily business bulletins on LBC.

Contact details

Mobile: 07936 963 267
Email: laith.khalaf@ajbell.co.uk

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