4.9
1,127 Good Money Guide users have given this provider a review rating of 4.9 out of 5 based on their genuine experience.
Excellent93%
Very good6%
Average1%
Poor0%
Terrible0%

Beanstalk Customer Reviews & Expert Rating

Beanstalk was voted "Best Junior ISA Account" in the 2026 Good Money Guide Investing Awards as well as winning in 2024, 2023 and 2022.
Richard Berry
Richard Berry
Good Money Guide Founder

Beanstalk Customer Reviews

Tell us what you think of this provider.

Amazing

9th January 2026

I have money invested for my 4 grandchildren. The app is easy to use and you can access it at anytime to check on your investments.

Linda Hawley

Fantastic

9th January 2026

Easy to use app

Susanna Green

Great service

9th January 2026

They have a great app and links back to cash back

Jaspreet Basra

Reliable

9th January 2026

Excellent app and communication, which helps one get to grips with understanding the performance of the investment

Rebecca Rickatson

Simple

9th January 2026

Easy to invest and deposit, very simple app to use and great interest

Laura Davies

Easy

9th January 2026

Makes saving for my children simple and easy

Luke Roe

Security

9th January 2026

It helps me with my daughter tree re savings but also invest at the same time

Kayli Braybrooke

Customer Centric

9th January 2026

Simplifies the saving process.

Pierre Roche

Seamless

9th January 2026

A really easy process for family and friends to contribute to the account, plus cashback automated so I can save money from my purchases without needing to do any transfers!

Emma Morris

User-friendly

9th January 2026

The app is easy to navigate and I love how you can forward details to friends and family so they can contribute to your child’s account and it’s totally hassle free.

Danielle George

Easy

9th January 2026

They make investing in your child’s future so simple. The whole set up is very user friendly and it’s incredibly straightforward to keep track of things.

Tom Calverley

Comfortable

9th January 2026

Junior investments for grandparents

Sheila Hardingham

Reliable

9th January 2026

Markets well for children really happy with the product

Helen Fairman

Easy

9th January 2026

Makes it simple to use

Richard Mason

Easy

9th January 2026

It simple to regularly save for my grandchildren

Judy Brook

Good at what they do

9th January 2026

Junior ISA

Barry Painter

Transparent

9th January 2026

No hassle and great rates for the Junior investing accounts

Alessandro Cavallo

Superb

9th January 2026

Perfect for saving fir my two children. Very happy.

Samantha Hill

Easy

9th January 2026

Convenience and ease. Once set up, it’s good to know it’s working in the back ground. I like that I’ve been able to set family contributions set up too.

Bryony Flint

Simple but effective

9th January 2026

Everything is in the app.

Gladys Davis

Beanstalk Expert Review

Beanstalk Investing App Expert Review: Voted Best Junior ISA 2026
Beanstalk Voted Best Junior ISA Good Money Guide Investing Awards 2026 (1)

Provider: Beanstalk Investing App

Verdict: Beanstalk is an investment app that helps you invest for your children through a Junior ISA. It was founded by the team behind Kidstart (a cashback site for children’s shopping) and won “best Investing Account” in 2025 and in 2022, 2023, 2024 & 2026 the award for Best Junior Stocks & Shares ISA as they make setting up an account to invest for your children’s future cheap, easy, flexible and accessible for you and for others to contribute to.

Visit Beanstalk

Is Beanstalk a good investing app?

Yes, Beanstalk won best investing account (as voted for by customers) in the 2025 Good Money Guide Awards. Beanstalk is a super simple way to start investing in an ISA. You can either invest as an adult of in a Junior ISA for your children, which you can split between cash savings and the stock market.

Beanstalk Junior Stocks and Shares ISA

Beanstalk has won “Best Junior Stocks and Shares ISA” in our 2024, 2023 and 2022 awards. They offer one of the easiest ways to invest for your children and you can quickly move money between cash and the stock market to manage the amount of risk/reward you want to take.

Julian Robson, founder and CEO of Beanstalk said after winning the award: We’re thrilled to have won the Best Junior ISA Award from the Good Money Guide Awards for the third consecutive year. It’s a fantastic recognition, reflecting our unique and valuable proposition for parents and grandparents who want to invest in their children’s future. Our focus is on encouraging long-term investment over cash savings, as that tends to yield better returns. We aim to support first-time retail investors with a simple solution to put money away for 18 years, and it’s great to see the UK retail investment market thriving.

Beanstalk provides a simple yet effective way to invest for your children’s future. Friends and family can also make deposits directly into your child’s account via the app. The investment options are split between cash and the stock market enabling parents to adjust the level of risk they are prepared to take. It’s a good option for parents who want to investment for their children, but don’t want to pick individual investments.

Why is Beanstalk so good? Well…

We quite often go to the ponies as a family, and if there is more than a single page of horses on the card for a race we always let the children have a little bet to cover more of the field. A while ago we were at Sandown, it was the last race of the day, and Hugo, my youngest, chose a horse based on the only sensible strategy available to a two-year-old, he picked one at random. As luck would have it, it was a rank outsider, a 13-year-old with an exceptional track record that was now a little bit long in the tooth. But, he wished and he hoped and Wishing and Hoping romped home to win at 50-1, after leading the pack the entire race.

ITV Racing caught us trackside on the TV as the owner burst into floods of tears and the trainers were whooping away. That’s us on the left clapping the trainers…

Wishing and Hoping

We didn’t get 50-1, we got 34-1 because we only bet with the bookies at the track, in particular, we like a chap called Barry, who wears a Fedora.

A tidy return nonetheless, but what to do with it? Usually, we’d all go out to dinner to celebrate, but because it was Dry January, we just went home. And because we’re trying to be more responsible parents, we thought we’d invest his winnings. Let it ride as it were, on the biggest bet out there, the stock market.

Previously, we invested one of my other children’s birthday money through GoHenry, but as Hugo is too young to get pocket money, I chose Beanstalk for him.

But was it a good time to be investing in your children’s future? I hear you ask. The stock market was coming off five-year highs, we may have been in a recession, the world is nearly at war and the tech giants who have historically created massive shareholder returns are laying people off left right and centre.

Well, here’s the thing, there is always a disaster around the corner, and actually now is the best time to start investing, because it is in fact, now. When it comes to long-term returns (Hugo can’t access money in his JISA until he is 18), the best time to invest is as soon as possible.

When I interviewed Julian Robson, the co-founder of Beanstalk, he told me that one of the inspirations for setting up the Beanstalk JISA was a chart that was on the wall in his old boss’s office. It was a chart of the stock market going back to the 1900s. His point was that if you look at a long-term chart of the stock market, you can’t see 1987’s Black Monday, The 1930’s Great Depression, or any other major stock market crash. In general, it just goes up.

Here is a good example of the Covid market crash that Cem Eyi (Beanstalks other co-founder highlighted on LinkedIn recently (the fund is Fidelity World Index).

Beanstalk market crash example

What does Beanstalk invest in?

When you invest in a Junior stocks and shares ISA with Beanstalk, you are essentially making two investments (three if you want to include your child’s future), the Legal & General Cash Trust fund and the Fidelity Global Index fund. The first tracks interest rates and keeps your money as cash, the second tracks the stock market, and holds big profitable companies like Apple, Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson (you can see the full portfolio breakdown here). It’s a standard diversified portfolio.

How much does Beanstalk cost?

It costs 0.5% of the balance of your portfolio for a Beanstalk JISA, but if cost is your only concern, you can buy these funds individually with a DIY platform like AJ Bell (0.25%) and interactive investor (JISA is free with a £9.99 per month trading account). Regardless of who you invest with, you will still have to pay the 0.12-0.15%. charges levied by L&G and Fidelity for managing the fund. It’s worth noting that Hargreaves Lansdown Junior ISA is now free, so much cheaper.

Why invest in a Beanstalk ISA?

Where Beanstalk earns its money is that you can very easily switch between what percentage of cash and stocks are in your child’s portfolio. There is a handy slider, which also shows what the historic returns would have been depending on the allocation.

So, if you think the market is going to crash, you can switch to more cash and interest, rather than stock market investments. But remember, a general rule of thumb when it comes to investing is that the younger you are, the more risk you should take. If you are old, the closer to retirement you are the lower risk your investments should be. So, when your child comes close to 18, you can tune down the risk so that you don’t get bitten by a shock stock market crash the week before they get their money.

Beanstalk JISA Cash Stocks Allocation

I’m not suggesting for a second that you bet on horses to kickstart your children’s financial literacy, that would be idiocy. But, if you have a few pounds sitting around, pick up your phone, download the app, and start investing for your children’s future. If you’re looking to bet on a winner, that’s a sure thing.

Pros

  • Switch between stocks and cash
  • Low cost & tax efficient
  • Easy to use & contribute

Cons

  • JISA funds can only be accessed when your child turns 18
  • App only, no website access
  • Pricing
    (4.5)
  • Market Access
    (4)
  • Online Platform
    (4.5)
  • Customer Service
    (4.5)
  • Research & Analysis
    (4)
Overall
4.3
Capital at risk
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