22,000 to 1 for every £1 Bond in the monthly prize draw (variable) What's the annual prize fund rate? 4.15%, variable (December 2024 prize draw) 4.00%, variable (from the January 2025 prize draw) Will you pay tax? No. All prizes are tax-free. What's the min. to pay ...
22,000 to 1 for every £1 Bond in the monthly prize draw (variable) What's the annual prize fund rate? 4.00%, variable Will you pay tax? No. All prizes are tax-free. What's the min. to pay in? £25 What's the max. to pay in? £50,000 Great for you if...
A total of 5,878,285 prizes worth £452,627,925 will be paid out in the April 2024 prize draw. There were 123,443,975,577 Bond numbers eligible for the draw. Since the first draw in June 1957, ERNIE has drawn over 684 million prizes with a total value of £30.5 billion. -Ends...
Increase for premium bonds limit PREMIUM Bonds are the UK's favourite savings vehicle with over PS50billion in them. Banks pay more than the Bonds In the case of NS&I, Premium Bond prizes are being cut back as the organisation meets its new Net Financing target which is set by HM Treasury...
Premium Bond Prizes Hit a LowPREMIUM BOND holders will see their chances of winning a big monthly prize fall in the draw next Monday after cuts carried out by National Savings and Investments (NS&I).Daily Mail (London)
NS&I chief executive, Ian Ackerley, said: “Today’s changes will provide a welcome boost for savers of all ages across the country, with more Premium Bonds prizes and some of the highest interest rates we’ve seen in over a decade. “In a fast-changing savings...
(NAPSI)—Here’s good news for many parents: Teaching kids to look at both sides of an issue can be easier and more delightful than they realize. That’s because there’s now a unique two-in-one … Books Can Make For A Great Way To Bond (NAPSI)—What do you do for an encore...
Premium Bond Prizes Slashed to Lowest Ever
Prize fund £441m+ No. of prizes 5.8m+ “Alexa, have I won?” Check prizes for the whole family using just your voice. You’ve got to sit down, I’m going to tell you something The day James became a millionaire (and nearly didn't find out). ...
We work out the number of lower value prizes so that there’s an equal number of £100 and £50 prizes, and that the total number of prizes of all values (including £25 prizes) is equal to the number of eligible £1 Bond units divided by the odds. See the odds Prize draw...