The frozen Savings  Allowance combined with rising interest rates will push over one million  taxpayers into paying tax on their savings this tax year, according to research  by investment platform AJ Bell.
In the 2023/24 tax year  it is estimated that over 2.7 million individuals will pay tax on interest, up  by a million in a year.
This year's predicted  total includes nearly 1.4 million basic rate taxpayers, a figure which has  quadrupled in just four years, AJ Bell's research found.
Individuals pay tax on  interest they earn on savings that exceeds the personal Savings Allowance,  which currently stands at £1,000 for basic rate taxpayers and £500 for higher  rate taxpayers. Additional rate taxpayers get no exemption and pay tax on all interest  they receive.
Laura Suter, Head of  Personal Finance at AJ Bell, said:
'These figures highlight just how many  taxpayers are facing a tax bill for their savings interest this year – a huge  leap when compared to last year. The combination of higher interest rates and  people having shunned ISA accounts in recent years means that the number paying  tax on their savings has more than tripled in the past four years.
'Rising rates and a frozen personal Savings  Allowance means some individuals are being taxed despite having relatively  modest pots of cash set aside for a rainy day. To add insult to injury, because  inflation is so high, they aren't even making a real return on their money –  yet they are still being taxed.'