- Surrender means cashing out now, paying the exit penalty, and reinvesting the proceeds yourself in a low-cost ETF.
- Paid-up means stopping new contributions but leaving the existing value invested inside the plan, where it keeps being charged.
- Surrender trades a one-off penalty today for low ongoing costs forever after; paid-up avoids the penalty but keeps paying the plan's annual drag for years.
- The earlier you are in the term, the more surrender tends to win, because there are many years of high charges still ahead to escape.
- The decision is a break-even calculation - compare the surrender penalty against the future charges you'd avoid, then model it for your exact plan.
Once you've decided an offshore savings plan like RL360 Quantum or Zurich Vista is too expensive to keep feeding, you hit the genuinely difficult question — and it's a maths question, not an emotional one. Do you surrender the plan (cash out now and take the penalty), or make it paid-up (stop paying in but leave the money invested)?
This is the closest call in the whole exit decision. Get it right and you can save thousands; get it wrong and you either pay an unnecessary penalty or bleed years of needless charges. Here's how to think about it. To run it for your exact contract, use the fee-drain calculator.
If you haven't yet, start with the broader playbook: I'm already in an offshore savings plan — what now?
What each option actually means
Surrender = you end the contract, receive the cash surrender value (your fund value minus any exit penalty and unrecovered initial-period charges), and reinvest that lump sum — plus your future monthly savings — yourself, typically in a low-cost global ETF through a direct broker.
- The cost: a one-off penalty today, which can be painful in the early years.
- The benefit: from tomorrow, your money sits in a ~0.2%-a-year vehicle instead of a 3–5%-a-year one. Forever.
Paid-up = you stop paying new premiums, but the value already built up stays inside the plan and remains invested.
- The cost: the plan's annual charges — management charge, policy fee, fund TERs — keep being deducted from the remaining value, often for years.
- The benefit: you avoid crystallising the full surrender penalty now, and you stop pouring new money into the high-cost structure.
The trap is assuming paid-up is automatically the "cheap" or "safe" option because you're not handing over a penalty. You're not paying a penalty — you're paying the annual drag instead, in instalments, potentially for a decade.
The break-even logic
Strip it back and the decision is one comparison:
Surrender penalty today vs the future charges you'd avoid by leaving.
- If the charges you'd avoid over the years you plan to stay invested are greater than the penalty, surrender wins.
- If the penalty is greater than the future charges you'd avoid, paid-up wins.
Two forces drive this:
- How early you are in the term. Early on, the penalty is high — but so is the volume of future charges you'd escape, and there are many years of them. The more years of 3–5% drag stretch ahead, the more surrender pulls ahead. Late in the term, the penalty shrinks toward zero and there's little future charge left to avoid, so paid-up (or even continuing) often wins.
- The size of the surrender penalty relative to your fund value. A small penalty makes surrender easy; a brutal early-period penalty can tip the balance toward paid-up for a while.
A worked intuition
Imagine a plan with a £40,000 fund value, a £10,000 surrender penalty (so £30,000 in your hand if you cash out), and roughly 4% a year in total charges with 15 years left to run.
- Surrender: take the £10,000 hit once. The £30,000 then compounds in a 0.2% ETF.
- Paid-up: keep the full £40,000 invested, but ~4% a year is skimmed off it for up to 15 years — which, compounded, can quietly exceed the one-off £10,000 penalty several times over.
In a case like that, the upfront penalty looks scary but is often the cheaper path, because 15 years of 4% drag on a larger balance is the bigger number. Flip the example to 2 years left with a tiny penalty, and paid-up or continuing wins easily. The only way to know is to run your actual figures — which is exactly what the calculator is for.
Practical cautions
- Check paid-up is allowed cleanly at your stage. During the initial period, "stopping" can itself trigger penalties or unfavourable treatment. Confirm the terms with the provider before assuming paid-up is free.
- Watch the reinvestment discipline. Surrender only beats paid-up if you actually reinvest the proceeds and keep contributing. If the lump sum drifts into a current account, the plan's enforced discipline may have been doing you a backhanded favour.
- Mind the tax timing on return to the UK. If you'll be UK-resident again soon, when you surrender can interact with your tax position. Model the economics first, then check the timing, then take advice.
- Don't get sold a switch. "Surrender this and move into our new plan" from a commission-based adviser is the oldest trick in the book. The destination should be a low-cost broker you control, not another product that pays someone.
Background reading: Expat Investment Plans Exposed, the RL360 Quantum review and the Zurich Vista review.
This article is educational information, not regulated financial advice. Figures are illustrative. Always check your own key features document and take professional advice before surrendering or altering a plan.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only. Nothing on ExpatMoneyMatters.com constitutes regulated financial advice. All figures and examples are illustrative. Your situation will differ. Always seek independent, regulated financial advice before making investment, mortgage or retirement decisions. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.