Best Junior ISA Platforms UK 2026
If you're comparing Junior ISA providers, you need more than a list of names. You need to know which platform is cheapest, which one is easiest to use, which one suits passive investing, and when switching makes sense.
Written by IMZA Invest. Last updated March 2026. Reviewed for UK parents and long-term family investing. Educational only — not financial advice.
TL;DR
Trading 212 = free, no-frills, best for set-and-forget. Vanguard = lowest fees on funds, best for long-term passive investing. AJ Bell = best user experience, first year free.
The Comparison: Top 5 Platforms
| Platform | Annual Fee | Fund Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trading 212 | £0 | 8,000+ | Budget-conscious families |
| Vanguard | 0.23% | 100+ | Passive, long-term investing |
| AJ Bell Youinvest | £24/yr (free year 1) | 15,000+ | Modern interface, choice |
| Hargreaves Lansdown | £24.95/yr | 80,000+ | Research-focused parents |
| Freetrade | £0 (free tier) | Stocks & ETFs only | Minimalists (stocks only) |
Detailed Reviews
🥇 #1 Trading 212 — Best Overall (Free)
Fee: £0 | Funds: 8,000+ | Minimum: No minimum
Why parents love it: Zero fees. Period. If you're investing £9,000/year for 13 years, every pound of fees saved is a pound that compounds. Trading 212's app is clean and easy to use, even for non-tech parents.
- Pros: No platform fee, fractional shares, auto-invest feature, excellent UX
- Cons: Limited research tools, customer support can be slow
- Good for: Families who know what they want to invest in (e.g., a simple all-world index fund) and don't need constant hand-holding
Read our full Trading 212 review
🥈 #2 Vanguard — Best for Passive Investing
Fee: 0.23% (capped at £375/yr) | Funds: 100+ Vanguard funds | Minimum: £500
Why parents love it: If you're a buy-and-hold investor, Vanguard's platform and funds are hard to beat. Their funds have some of the lowest ongoing charges in the industry (0.05%–0.15%), so even with the platform fee, your total costs are competitive.
- Pros: Low fund fees, balanced portfolios available, UK-based support, rock-solid reputation
- Cons: Only Vanguard funds (no external funds), £500 minimum, interface is functional not flashy
- Good for: Families comfortable with a set-and-forget approach, long-term investing, passive portfolios
🥉 #3 AJ Bell Youinvest — Best User Experience
Fee: £24/yr (free first year) | Funds: 15,000+ | Minimum: £1
Why parents love it: Modern interface that doesn't feel dated. The first year free means you can test it out. Good balance between simplicity and choice — not as overwhelming as Hargreaves, not as bare-bones as Trading 212.
- Pros: Modern UX, first year free, low minimum (£1), ready-made portfolios, 15,000+ fund choice
- Cons: Fees kick in year 2 (£24/yr), not as cheap as Trading 212 long-term, not as fund-focused as HL
- Good for: Tech-comfortable parents who want good UX, families who like some choice but don't need 80,000 funds
Hargreaves Lansdown & Freetrade (Honorable Mentions)
Hargreaves Lansdown: 80,000+ funds, excellent research tools, but £24.95/year fee. Only choose if you're a research junkie and want to deeply analyse funds. Overkill for most families.
Freetrade: Free, but stocks/ETFs only (no mutual funds). Good for families who specifically want to invest in individual stocks, but most families should stick to diversified funds.
How to Choose (Decision Tree)
Q: Do you know what you want to invest in (e.g., a specific index fund)?
- YES → Trading 212 (save £24/yr in fees)
- NO → Continue below
Q: Do you prefer simplicity (set & forget) or do you want choice?
- Simplicity → Vanguard (ready-made balanced portfolios)
- Choice → Continue below
Q: Is user experience important to you?
- YES → AJ Bell (modern interface, first year free)
- NO → Trading 212 (save the £24)
Switching and transfer rules
You can transfer an existing Junior ISA to a new provider without losing the tax wrapper, but you should use the new provider's official transfer process rather than withdrawing money yourself. In practice, transfer times vary and older Child Trust Fund transfers can be slower. If your child has a Child Trust Fund, read our children investing guide before moving anything.
Mistakes parents make when choosing a Junior ISA
- Choosing based on brand alone — a familiar name is not always the best value
- Ignoring total cost — platform fee plus fund fee matters over 10–18 years
- Overcomplicating the portfolio — one diversified fund is often enough
- Leaving an old Child Trust Fund unreviewed — check whether the provider and fees still make sense
What to Invest In (Once You've Chosen a Platform)
Picking a platform is step 1. Step 2 is deciding what to invest in. For most families:
- Vanguard's LifeStrategy 60 (Moderate Growth) — 60% stocks, 40% bonds. Balances growth with stability.
- Vanguard Global Stock Index Fund — All-world stocks, ultra-low fees (0.12% OCF). Simple and diversified.
- Trading 212's "Invest" plan — Choose a global all-world index fund (e.g., iShares Core MSCI World ETF)
See our index funds guide for more details.
Key Links
- Investing for Children UK — Complete guide to options beyond Junior ISAs
- Junior ISA Guide — Rules, limits, how to open one
- Best Investment Apps UK — Adult platforms (for comparison)
- ISA Allowance 2026 — Annual limits explained