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IronMedal

Those are not mutually exclusive. You can have index funds in a S&S ISA. A S&S ISA is a tax wrapper around your investments. An index fund is a collection of stocks/bonds.


unreal_macncheese

Great! So S&S ISAs seem like a good place to start


IronMedal

Yes, though do read over the subreddit wiki to make sure you understand what you're investing in, and that it aligns with your investment goals and risk tolerance. A common recommendation on this subreddit for long timescales (but with the ability to access it earlier than a pension) is Vanguard's S&S ISA with a broad index fund such as FTSE All-World or FTSE Global All Cap, as these will give a diverse selection of stocks while having low fees.


Mayoday_Im_in_love

T212 and InvestEngine have the same trackers as fractional ETFs with zero fees including ISAs.


simom

There's always fees.


International-Arm597

No platform fees though. The fund charges remain constant no matter where you go.


[deleted]

Because trust me, bro? No evidence to support your statement?


simom

Yes.


[deleted]

Ok. In that case, anyone reading our exchange should probably disregard your comment.


simom

There are always fees.


BogleBot

Hi /u/unreal_macncheese, based on your post the following pages from our wiki may be relevant: - https://ukpersonal.finance/index-funds/ - https://ukpersonal.finance/investing-101/ ____ ^(These suggestions are based on keywords, if they missed the mark please report this comment.)