How to Buy UK Gilts: A Step-by-Step Guide
Updated 22 April 2026: UK 10-year gilt yields hit 5.10% on 21 April — the highest sustained level since July 2008 — before settling at 4.89% as the 30 April Bank of England decision came into focus. The 30-year touched 5.747% earlier in the month, a peak not seen since 1998. If you have been waiting for the right moment to buy gilts, the market has spent the last fortnight handing you one. The trigger was March CPI re-accelerating to 3.3% from 3.0%, driven by motor fuels feeding through from the Iran energy shock. Money markets that had priced two cuts in 2026 now price one hike by December — back to 4% Bank Rate. Andrew Bailey told investors directly they were "getting ahead of themselves", but the curve has not budged. That mispricing is the buyer's edge: every basis point of hike that fails to materialise puts gilt prices up. Three routes get you in: direct from the UK Debt Management Office, through an investment platform inside an ISA or SIPP, or via a low-cost gilt ETF. The right choice turns on three things — how much you are investing, whether you want a tax wrapper, and whether you plan to hold to maturity or trade. This guide covers all three, the tax rules that make gilts uniquely powerful for higher-rate taxpayers, and how to think about the BoE meeting eight days from now.