It looks as though the over-65 bonds are similar to the Nat. Savings Certs, vegasmags but I know what you mean. It is like the chocolate bars that go out of production for a while, then return smaller and dearer.
*annsixty" I have looked again at the M&S bank web page again, and I think I understand it.
bank.marksandspencer.com/banking/current-accounts/existing-customers/#monthly-saver
To get the savings account, you must first have a currrent account. There is one which does not have charges, and another which has a monthly charge of £10 and various perks and vouchers etc. You would need to work out whether all the perks are worth £10 a month to you (among other things there seem to be £10 worth of tea/coffee/cake vouchers for their cafe). There is at the moment a £100 gift card on offer if you transfer an existing A/C into an M&S one, which sounds useful - that is ten months charges - or £100 bonus if you get the free account.
You can pay from £25 to £250(max) monthly into the savings account. The 6% gross interest is on the amount in the account each month, so it increases each month. On the maximum that you can save (£3000 in the year) you would get a total of £96.63 interest. At the end of the year the money is transferred to the current account and you can start again.
I think what I shall do is get a free current account, and set up a direct debit of the amount I want to save to go from my existing current account into that, then from there into the savings account.
Good Morning Saturday 27th June 2026
How would you rank the last 6 British Prime Minister's


