Vanguard has warned, while 23 million people in the UK hold a combined £135.7billion worth of Premium Bonds, about 14.3 million haven’t won.
New data shows 14 million Premium Bonds holders have NEVER won. Vanguard has warned, while 23 million people in the UK hold a combined £135.7billion worth of Premium Bonds, about 14.3 million haven’t won.
Vanguard put this down to 15.1 million people holding £0 to £100, meaning the probability of winning is “extremely low”. It said even those with “significant amounts” have a “very slim” chance of “winning big”.
James Norton, Head of Retirement and Investments, said: “The lesson here is the power of long-term investing and compound returns. There are ways you can set yourself up for the best chance of success, without relying on luck.”
READ MORE Rachel Reeves confirms bumper £575 on way for millions of state pensioners
NS&I says the April draw is expected to have close to six million tax-free prizes worth about £375m. But it has trimmed the number of higher-value prizes and increased the number of £25 ones.
For example, the number of £100,000 prizes will fall from 78 this month to an estimated 71 in April, while the number of £25,000 payouts is to be cut from 311 to 284. The number of £25 prizes is to rise from about 2.6m to just over 2.8m.
Alastair Douglas at the consumer credit website TotallyMoney said: “If you held the maximum amount of £50,000 and won the equivalent of 3.3%, that’s £1,650 tax-free.
“A higher-rate taxpayer earning the same in savings could face a bill of £743.”
Money Saving Expert, the site founded by BBC and ITV star Martin Lewis, said: “For most savers with average luck, accounts that pay interest will now be even more likely to beat Premium Bonds.
MSE added: “Though this interest rate can go up and down over time, you know exactly what you’ll earn at any given point – so it still provides more certainty than Premium Bonds, where many saving the same £1,000 would win nothing.
“Many people often think: “I’m likely to get the prize rate (or thereabouts) – and there’s a small chance of winning a million”, but this isn’t correct.
“You’re actually likely to get quite a lot less than the headline prize rate (3.6% or 3.3%), and there’s a negligible chance of winning a million.”

