Posts Tagged ‘voucher’

Child Savings and Investment

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

One of the options that is available to some people for savings and investment is the child trust fund vouches which is available for children born in the United Kingdom following September 1, 2002. Any child that is born in the UK after September 1, 2002 is entitled to a “child trust fund voucher”, which forms the basis of a child trust fund. These vouchers are available to any child claiming the child benefit, and child benefit is a universal benefit that all children in the UK are entitled to receiving regardless of family income.

United Kingdom Child Trust Funds

United Kingdom Child Trust Funds

Here are the basic facts that you need to know about child trust funds:

- All children who are born after September 1, 2002 will receive a voucher that will allow to open a child trust fund.

- All children can receive a Child Trust Fund voucher regardless of their family income level. In order to receive the voucher the child must be registered to receive the child benefit.

- All savings placed into a child trust fund are tax free.

- If you are part of a low income family, then you can actually receive additional money to invest.

- All children are capable of receiving an extra 250 pounds that they can invest as soon as they reach the age of seven.

- You can top up the child trust fund by as much as 1,200 pounds every year.

- Anyone can contribute to a child trust fund, so it is an excellent addition to the gift list because family members, friends and neighbors can all contribute for your child.

- At the age of sixteen the child is allowed to make the decisions about how the money will be invested.

- The investment itself cannot be accessed until the child has reached the adult age of 18.

- Child trust funds are transferable between different people and it does not require any extra cost.

- The first child trust funds are going to mature in the year 2020. From April 2009 and on, child trust funds can be opened online and no voucher has to be sent in to the fund provider.

- 24 percent of all parents are topping up their children’s trust funds.

- In August 2008 alone more than 3.61 child trust funds existed in the UK.

Once you have received a voucher, the next step is to choose a provider for the child trust fund, to contact them, and then to open the account up. The voucher needs to be sent in with the paperwork, at least until April 2009 when the trust funds can be opened up online without requiring that the voucher be sent along. Once the child trust fund is started, all that is left is topping it up every year to contribute to your child’s investment.

Photo Credits: 1

Originally posted 2009-01-07 05:46:57. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Blog Traffic Exchange Related Articles
  • Make a budget.7 Budgeting Examples /caption] When it comes to budgeting examples, one of the best things that you can do is to look at a successful budget and draw from it to establish your own. Everyone has a different idea of what makes a good working budget, and your budgeting examples need to be......
  • Start training your teen about money.3 Tips for Teen Investing Parents like to complain that their teenage children do not listen to them. However, when it comes to matters dealing with money, the opposite is actually often true. Teenagers often welcome the advice that their parents have to give regarding finances, money management and investments. In the past few years,......
  • Wondering Why You Should Invest in US Savings Bonds?How do Savings Bonds Work /caption] Are you wondering why you should invest in United States savings bonds, or how savings bonds work? This is a question that not enough people are considering these days, because most people are pressing their luck instead by gambling with stocks and other investments. So many people are turning......
  • Study and Save Money4 Tips for College Students Budgets /caption] If you are a college student, then your primary focus is probably set on your studies and trying to maintain your education so that you will be benefited in the future. Unfortunately, one of the things that you may not be putting enough consideration into is how you are......
  • Savings BondsHow Do Savings Bonds Work? /caption] Savings bonds are a major offering in credit unions and at banks. It is important to know what savings bonds are all about so that you can understand whether or not they will benefit you in any way. This page is going to take you through some of the......
Blog Traffic Exchange Related Sites
  • Free College Money Part 1: Starting with Pennies This article is the first of a five-part series on finding college money, whether for you or your child. In this article, you will see how pennies a day can quickly add up to more then $6,000 in free college money, and where that college money can come from. Begin......
  • (Quarter) Million Dollar BabyIs Your Child An Investment? A common comment about children and the expense it takes to raise them is that such costs are 'an investment in the future'.  As analogies go, this isn't bad; we put money, time and effort into raising children, and expect them to grow, mature, and become productive when they get......
  • TIPS_InflationNew Options for Investing in Inflation Protected Securities If you have been a regular reader, you know that I am a fan of  I-Bonds and Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) as a secure retirement investment that is also an inflation hedge. If you can put them in a tax-deferred account, TIPS may work better, if only because you......
  • blog traffic exchangeBaby Bonds or Lazy Man's Trust Fund It seems like Baby Bonds are in the news. I've been reading at Dollar Roller and Money Smart Life. The idea seems to be that the government would open a $5,000 account for every newborn baby in the US. The money would grow and mature at the child's 18th birthday.......
  • blog traffic exchangeFollowing The Rule Of 10% Is Easy And The Savings Add Up. Back when I was in the hole of tens of thousands of dollars, I still managed to save money. Was it the best decision? Probably not - if I had sent that money to my debt I could have been debt-free earlier (if, of course, I had stopped spending, which......