Premium Bond savers set for better payouts as prize rate hits 14-year high

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Premium Bond savers are poised for better payouts after National Savings & Investments (NS&I) increased its prize fund to 3.15 per cent from next week’s draw.

This is the fourth increase in the Premium Bond prize fund since interest rates started rising just over a year ago.

The latest increase means an additional £15 million in prize money compared to last month, bringing the total to £314.3 million.

The odds of each £1 Bond winning a prize remain fixed at 24,000 to 1, but more prizes above £50 will be paid out.

National Savings & Investments (NS&I) has increased its prize fund to 3.15 percent from next week’s drawing

The changes mean that the number of prizes worth £50 will increase to £100,000 from next month’s draw on 2nd February.

The 3.15 percent prize rate is an average rate of return, and savers can do better or worse than this

Some 870,000 NS&I savers will also benefit from a boost to the Direct Saver, Direct Isa and Income Bonds.

Premium Bonds: How Do They Work?

Customers buy bonds worth £1 each, but now have to buy a minimum of £25 in one go.

Each month, each bond participates in a lottery.

There is a 24,000 to 1 chance that each £1 bond will win a prize. Check the winning bonds every month with our Premium Bond tables.

Customers can cash in their bonds whenever they want so they can be treated as similar to an easily accessible savings account, but savers will have to wait a few days before they can withdraw money from Premium Bonds.

All prices are tax free.

> Should I buy Premium Bonds or open an easily accessible savings account?

Meanwhile, about 80,000 young people under the age of 18 will benefit from an increase in their Junior Isa rate.

The rate of NS&I’s second most popular account, Direct Saver, rises from 2.3 percent to 2.6 percent.

It is the highest rate paid since the account launched in March 2010.

This puts the easily accessible account just behind the top payers on internet-based accounts and a top rate if you want to manage the account by phone.

You can check out the best deals currently on offer in This is Money’s independent best buy savings rate charts.

Income Bonds, popular with retirees because they pay monthly interest, also rose to 2.6 percent.

It’s the highest rate since 2008. Just a year ago, these bills paid just 0.35 percent after a low of just 0.01 percent for the 12 months to November 2021.

The Direct Isa rises from 1.75 pc. to 2.15 percent, while the Junior Isa rose from 2.7 percent. to 3.4 percent. It is the latest move by the government-backed bank to meet its funding targets.

State savings bank NS&I plans to raise £6bn plus or minus £3bn in its financial year ending at the end of March.

By mid-late September, it had reached a total of £3.4 billion.

The latest figures from the Bank of England show it saw £281m out in November, the first time it has seen an outflow since September 2021 and the biggest since March of the same year.

NS&I removed my grandmother’s Premium Bond… and took back the profits!’ Well-founded complaints against NS&I double

Savers with some of the very first Premium Bonds have won ombudsman cases, such as successful complaints from NS&I customers.

A woman with a 1960 Premium Bond was told she was never the rightful owner, while another customer saw NS&I remove his late grandmother’s Premium Bond and ordered him to pay back £2,500 in prize money.

These grievances are also part of a wider trend of complaints against NS&I with customer cases confirmed by the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) more than doubling by 2022.

> NS&I removed my grandmother’s Premium Bonds: how complaints have risen

NS&I CEO Ian Ackerley said: ‘The changes will give savers a welcome boost with more Premium Bond prices and some of the highest interest rates in more than a decade.’

The amount of Premium Bonds stands at almost £200 billion as gamblers hope for a big win.

The February draw has 4,989,652 prizes ranging from £25 to £1 million up for grabs.

This is an increase of 2,949 prizes compared to last month’s draw, which had 4,986,706 cash prizes.

This corresponds to £15,145,525 in extra cash available in next month’s draw.

There will be fewer £25 cash prizes, as part of NS&I’s strategy to lower smaller prizes and raise larger ones.

This time around, the £25 prize count drops by 241,741 to 2.37 million, from 2.6 million in this month’s draw.

The number is down from 3.5 million in the December draw.

The biggest increase for next month will come in £50 and £100 prices, both up from £121,077 to £1.28m each.

The number of £500 prizes will rise to 37,719, with a further 605 £1,000 prizes to be paid for a total of 12,573.

The number of £5,000 prizes will increase by 61 to 1,177, while there will be an additional 31 £10,000 payouts, to 590.

The total of £25,000 in prizes increases by 12 to 236, while there will be 117 winners of £50,000, up from 111.

The £100,000 prize increases by three to 59, while the £1 million jackpot remains the same at two per month.

Price increases of the Premium Bond draw from January to February

Value of prizes

£1 million

£100,000

£50,000

£25,000

£10,000

£5,000

£1,000

£500

£100

£50

£25

Total

£299,202,350

January no. of prices

2

56

111

224

559

1.116

11,968

35,904

1,159,432

1,159,432

2,617,902

Total

4,986,706

February no. of prices

2

59

117

236

590

1,177

12,573

37,719

1,280,509

1,280,509

2,376,161

Total

4,989,652

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