Monthly savings for £50,000 in 2 years

Two scenarios — zero interest vs 5% AER.

By · Updated · Methodology

Short answer

£2,083/month cash, or £1,985/month in a 5% AER account.

Breakdown

  • Total months: 24
  • Cash-only plan: £2,083 × 24 = £49,992
  • 5% AER plan: £1,985/month (compound growth does some of the work)
  • Interest earned over 2 years at 5%: ~£2,360

Other rates on the same target

  • 3% AER (typical easy-access): ~£2,024/month
  • 4% AER (competitive easy-access): ~£2,005/month
  • 7% (long-run equity tracker): ~£1,947/month — but equities are not appropriate for a horizon under five years

Weekly & daily equivalents

  • Per week (cash): ~£481
  • Per day (cash): ~£69
  • Per week (5% AER): ~£458

If you can only save less

Saving £1,458/month instead — 70% of the target rate — still reaches roughly £34,994 in 2 years (cash) or £35,000 at 5% AER. A smaller amount you sustain every month almost always outperforms a larger pledge that collapses in month four.

Where to keep this money

For a 2-year horizon, cash is almost always the right answer — a competitive easy-access account or fixed-rate bond protects the capital from short-term market swings. Equities can lose 30%+ in a year and may not have time to recover. For balances above the £85,000 FSCS limit per institution, spread across providers.

Inflation-adjusted target

At 3% long-run inflation, £50,000 in 2 years' time is worth roughly £47,130 in today's money. To preserve real purchasing power you'd actually need to hit £53,045 in 2 years — about £127/month extra on the cash plan. A 5% AER account broadly keeps pace with inflation; a 3% account does not.

Calculators

Other savings targets