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Monday 06 September 2021 5:39 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 03 November 2021 6:55 pm

Here’s how much you must put into your child’s JISA to get them on the housing ladder

By: Josh Martin

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Parents and grandparents face putting away more than £3,000 per year typically to help children on to the property ladder in adulthood, and in London it’s more than double that.

A child born in 2021 would need average annual deposits of £3,129 into their Junior Isa (Jisa) to afford the average UK first-time buyer deposit once they reach the age of 18, according to Quilter.

And in the capital, London parents will need to squirell away £7,120 per year.

The research assumed that the average first-time buyer deposit, at £57,278 in 2020, increases by two per cent each year.

It also assumed a four per cent return on savings.

Heather Owen, financial planning expert at Quilter, said: “The average amount put into Jisas was just over £1,000 in 2019/20, but a child born today will need contributions worth over three times that amount, or £3,129 each and every year for 18 years in order to generate a pot big enough to afford a deposit when they reach adulthood.

“Parents and grandparents will be assisted by the fact that Jisas have become significantly more generous, and the subscription limit stands at £9,000, but many parents and grandparents will underestimate just how much is required to support their child or grandchild become a homeowner.”

Quilter analysed Halifax first-time buyer data to make the findings.

Read more

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