Interactive Investor vs Vanguard: fees and features compared

4 min Read Published: 14 Oct 2024

Interactive Investor vs VanguardIn this comprehensive comparison, we compare investment platforms Interactive Investor and Vanguard Investor, looking at what they offer to clients and how they could help you grow your money. We provide insight into the cheapest way to invest in Vanguard, which could actually mean using Interactive Investor*.

We also include details on how readers can take advantage of an Interactive Investor offer. Check out the table below for more information. 

Interactive Investor vs Vanguard - which is better?

Interactive Investor Vanguard
Services Company account

Pension trading account

Model portfolios

Quick Start funds

LifeStrategy funds

Target Retirement funds

Personal financial advice for retirement planning

Products ISA, General Investment Account, Junior ISA, SIPP

Trading account

ISA, General Investment Account, Junior ISA, SIPP

Managed ISA

Managed SIPP

Minimum investment No minimum £500 or £100 monthly investment
Platform fees £4.99 per month (Investor essentials - Invest up to £50,000)

£11.99 per month (Investor - Invest over £50,000)

£19.99 per month (Super Investor - Invest over £50,000 plus additional free trades and up to 5 friends and family)

£5.99 per month (Pension Essentials - Invest up to £50,000 in a SIPP)

£12.99 per month (Pension Builder - Invest over £50,000 in a SIPP)

No charge for a Junior ISA on the Investor plan

0.15% annual account fee (capped at £375)

0.45% annual account fee for its Managed ISA (capped at £1,125)

Customer reviews (Trustpilot) 4.7/5.0 4.1/5.0
Money to the Masses offers See our full Interactive Investor review for our latest offer n/a

Interactive Investor vs Vanguard - services

Fundamentally, Vanguard offers a way to invest in its own range of passive funds in an easy and cost-effective way. While it offers some guides and resources, it principally provides investors with either a DIY option or its popular LifeStrategy or Target Retirement funds. For Interactive Investor, which offers a great deal of investment choice, there are research tools, guides, top-fund picks and model portfolios to help beginners through to proficient investors. In addition, it has a Company Account, which allows trading from limited companies, as well as a pension trading account, which can hold a greater variety of asset classes than are available through a standard SIPP.

Interactive Investor vs Vanguard - products

Both Interactive Investor and Vanguard have the main products you would expect from a large-scale investment platform, with a stocks and shares ISA, GIA, JISA and SIPP. They each lack a Junior SIPP and LISA, which might lead investors looking specifically for those options to go elsewhere (for example, to Hargreaves Lansdown*, which offers both).

In addition to the main wrappers, Interactive Investor also has a trading account, which allows clients to invest in more than 40,000 UK and global stocks, as well as funds, investment trusts and ETFs. Foreign exchange costs are minimised with the trading account as investors can hold up to 9 currencies.

Interactive Investor vs Vanguard - minimum investment

Interactive Investor doesn't require a minimum lump sum to open an account. Those looking to take advantage of its free regular investment service are required to set up a direct debit with a minimum regular investment of £25 per month. Interactive Investor is therefore a good option for those looking to trial it without having to commit to an initial large deposit. Investors do, however, need to keep in mind the flat monthly fee of at least £4.99, as well as the £3.99 standard dealing charge, which can make it expensive for those with smaller pots.

For Vanguard, meanwhile, the minimum lump sum investment is £500, with a minimum monthly investment of £100.

Interactive Investor vs Vanguard - fees

Vanguard's flat fee of 0.15%, which is capped at £375 for accounts over £250,000, make it one of the best-value options in the market. It is, however, even cheaper to invest in Vanguard funds through Interactive Investor if you are investing more than £96,000 in either an ISA or GIA. You will also benefit from much greater investment choice rather than being limited solely to Vanguard's own funds.

We explain this in more detail in our independent Vanguard review.

If you are investing in Interactive Investor, you need to keep in mind how many changes you are likely to make to your portfolio as there is a standard trading charge of £3.99 on its £11.99 per month subscription service, although one trade per month is included within the monthly fee. There are full details of the trading costs in our Interactive Investor review.

Interactive Investor vs Vanguard - customer reviews

According to independent customer review site Trustpilot, both Interactive Investor and Vanguard score well, securing an overall score of 4.1 or more out of 5.0 stars. Interactive Investor, however, is particularly impressive, with 4.7 out of 5.0 stars, based on over 25,000 reviews, compared with around 3,000 reviews for Vanguard. Overall, 82% of respondents thought Interactive Investor was "Excellent", compared with 63% for Vanguard. Both were praised for good customer service and ease of use.

Summary - Interactive Investor vs Vanguard

If you are looking to invest in a range of funds and investment types, Interactive Investor will be the natural choice over Vanguard because the latter only offers access to its own funds. If, however, you are contemplating whether to invest in Vanguard either directly through Vanguard Investor or instead through Interactive Investor, the decision will largely be guided by how much you are likely to invest. If you are investing up to £96,000 and are unlikely to go over that amount, Vanguard's 0.15% flat fee makes it the cheaper option. However, for investments over £96,000 it works out to be more cost-effective to invest with Interactive Investor.

 

If a link has an * beside it this means that it is an affiliated link. If you go via the link Money to the Masses may receive a small fee which helps keep Money to the Masses free to use. But as you can clearly see this has in no way influenced this independent and balanced review of the product. The following link can be used if you do not wish to help Money to the Masses - Hargreaves Lansdown, Interactive Investor