Just because ISAs offer a tax advantage doesn't mean that you will necessarily benefit from it. If your income is such that you pay no tax anyway, there's not much point in taking out an ISA because the tax advantages won't help you.
For people who do pay tax, some thought needs to be given to the type of share or fund which you shelter in an ISA.
For many people the best type of assets to hold in an ISA used to be those that generated income rather than capital growth. Why?
However, in April 2004 the tax credit on dividends was abolished, so the income is now subject to tax.
Even if you don't use your CGT outside an ISA, it may be worth putting growth investments into an ISA, if you're planning on leaving them intact for the truly long term. If you need to sell the assets at a long-distant date in the future, and the asset is held outside an ISA, it's true that you can use your CGT annual allowance to minimise any tax due, but that may not be enough to cover all the gains, especially if the investment has done well and has been held a long time. If it had been held within an ISA, it won't matter how much the investment has grown, it will still be free from CGT (assuming current rules still apply at that time).
As you approach retirement, you can consolidate your gains and switch out of growth funds, into high yielding equities or bonds. This will generate reliable income and, importantly, it will all be tax free.
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