ChrisFukuoka wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2020 1:52 am
It seems each account is capped at 1.2m and you need a new account to continue investing each year? Is that correct?
Hey, Chris.
It gets confusing with NISA account and NISA years...
Yes, each account is capped at 1.2m a year, for 5 years. Then, the investments you made within each individual NISA year are tax-free for 5yrs.
You could open another NISA account with a different securities company the following year, if for example, you didn't like the range of products offered from the company you chose in the previous year. This new NISA account will let you invest 1.2m that year. You can't still add money into your first NISA account though -that is locked for the 5 years (unless of course you wanted to sell)...
If you've done your research before opening a NISA, the likelihood of wanting to switch providers is minimal... So there's no need to open a new NISA account each year, you'll just automatically start using another of your 5 NISA years of tax-free investing... (See links below for a visual of this)
I think most of us here on RetireJapan have used either Rakuten or SBI due to the low fees and range of products you can invest in.
If you didn't max out the full 1.2m for a particular year, once that year finishes its 5 years of tax free growth/loss you can roll it over and then add to it, topping it up to 1.2m if you choose...
If you have Google Chrome and you use translate, I found these pages useful to visualise how NISA works...
https://www.fsa.go.jp/policy/nisa2/abou ... index.html
And this one gives a good example of how the 'rollover' works...
https://www.fsa.go.jp/policy/nisa2/case ... index.html