Any risk free savings arrangement currently provides rather pathetic returns, cash ISAs probably being the best option. However, you might want to consider some form of guaranteed return investment ISA (often called FTSE tracker or something similar) whereby you are guaranteed some minimum (not stellar) growth but have a chance of gaining quite a bit more if the investment market strengthens. The only risk is if growth rates remain flat in which case you will not get as good as the best interest available. However, over a period of 10 years, your chances are (historically) not bad. The only point being that usually these things are lump sum concepts, not steady contribution ones. If going for conventional savings (ISA or not) make sure you keep an eye on market developments and be ready to switch rather than sitting with a vehicle that has fallen behind in performance. If you are prepared to take a bit of risk (I would, based on a 10 year span) then consider an investment ISA (for example FTSE based) - this is a time when it is not unreasonable to hope for a recovery within the next few years, but do not rely on steady growth - set yourself a benchmark and withdraw funds once that growth is reached. For example, you could pull out all money gained once you have a 25% gain (or any other level you choose) - put it in the best available conventional savings, and repeat if growth continues.