Updated
Updated · MoneyAge · Jun 25
55% of UK Adults Revise Savings Plans as Inflation Drains Household Buffers
Updated
Updated · MoneyAge · Jun 25

55% of UK Adults Revise Savings Plans as Inflation Drains Household Buffers

1 articles · Updated · MoneyAge · Jun 25

Summary

  • Chetwood Bank’s survey of 1,000 adults found 55% of UK adults have changed savings or wider financial plans because of rising living costs and inflation, with the share reaching 71% in Wales and 64% in London.
  • 57% of respondents said they put money into savings only to withdraw it for everyday expenses, while 56% of working-age adults said they intend to save but often fail to follow through.
  • 39% said they would struggle to cover an unexpected £300 bill, reinforcing the bank’s view that savings are increasingly being used as a short-term cash-management tool rather than a long-term buffer.
  • 67% are worried inflation will erode the value of their savings, and 53% said financial decisions feel more complicated now than they did 10 years ago.

Insights

As savings dwindle, is Britain facing a crisis of financial literacy or a crisis of inadequate wages?
With millions unable to cover a £300 bill, can new government savings schemes truly fix the UK's financial fragility?
New rules and AI aim to close the UK's 'advice gap', but will people trust them with their money?