I thought reading this thread would help me ( and my wife ).
We inherited just over £500k a few months back.
I'm retired ( now 73 ) and have a decent enough private pension + state pension so we're okay.
My wife is 10 years younger, the idea is/was to invest the cash to provide for her once I'm gone.
We put £40k into ISA's. Done nowt with the rest.
Spoke to my pension provider ( Fidelity ) and M and G. Both want 2% once they provide a suitable portfolio. Parting with nigh on £10k seems a bit strong?!
I have zero knowledge of markets, investments etc.
I was told to contact Unbiased.com for advice... Is that a sensible step, since currently the money is earning sweet eff all in a Barclays account ?
If I were in your situation...
The £40k you have in ISAs, I'd have that in a stocks and shares ISA. Invested in an all world index tracker, something like this:
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For the remaining £460k...
- £300k into a Stocks & Shares general investment account. Again, in something like the link above. £150k each. It'll be subject to CGT & dividend tax but between the two of your allowances, it is easily manageable. Drip feed this into stocks and shares ISAs over the coming years to utilise your ISA allowances (£20k per annum each starting in April) and reduce the (potential) tax burden.
- Max your Premium Bonds, up to £100k between the two of you if you don't have any already - it's not a great long term investment, but it hedges the risk of the above both from a stocks and shares volatility and tax liability perspective. It'll provide some tax free income - at current rates, likely around £3k per year. If you're already got premium bonds, look at savings accounts instead - interest is subject to tax but you have an annual allowance on that as well. Or if you're comfortable with the potential volatility, increase the £300k shares pot.
- Take the remaining £60k and enjoy yourselves. Have some luxury. Decorate the house to make it more comfortable and manageable, travel, treat the family, buy new golf clubs. Whatever works for you.
Obviously, this isn't tailored advice. It's just what I would do. A financial advisor, you're looking at a minimum of 1%. They'll go through all your circumstances. They could offer to manage it all for you so you don't have to think about it, that'll come at a premium but it could be a lot better for you if you either don't know what you're doing or don't want the stress and hassle.
As an initial step probably need to shift to a decent savings account as should be getting £1500 pcm on it in an easy access account.
Given the value, it potentially has tax implications if knocks you into 40% bracket, and paying a fee might be worthwhile if it saves you more in tax
Also given your age, you might not want anything that has a bit of risk & volatility if theres a big crash that doesn't have a quick recovery.
Also does it then bring you into IHT threshold? As if youre already comfortable anyway then might worth just dishing a chuck out to kids & grandkids who need money more now (also factor in potentially losing it in care home costs)
Agree with all this.
Chase & Tesco both offer c4% on instant access savings. That could be done today as a holding position rather than heehaw in Barclays.
The bits in bold are where a good IFA could pay for themselves.