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I tried the Monzo 1p challenge and saved over £500. Here’s how you can do the same

It was 13 January 2025 when I first discovered Monzo’s ‘1p challenge’ – an automated in-app savings plan that promises to save you £667.95 over 365 days.

“I could save nearly 700 quid, just by putting aside a penny a day for a year?!” I thought, before the remnants of my GCSE maths kicked in. I’m no accountant, but something wasn’t adding up.

The truth is, the 1p challenge does sound a little easier than it actually is, but it’s definitely doable if you’re serious about saving. And while the Monzo banking app is perhaps the easiest way to get involved, anybody can do it by simply transferring and saving each day – though admittedly that takes a little more admin.

Spoiler alert: so far (at the time of writing), I’ve saved £526.50 by doing the 1p challenge – I’m on day 324, FYI. So if you’re thinking about trying it in 2026, here’s everything you need to know.

What is the 1p challenge?

The 1p saving challenge is a 365-day plan that allows you to save up to £667.95 by transferring money in 1p increments each day. You start on a penny, then the next day you save two pence, then three pence and so on. By day 365, you’ll transfer – you guessed it – £3.65 to your savings account, meaning that’s the biggest daily sum you’ll have to part with.

If you bank with Monzo, you can opt in to the challenge on the app, and it will do it automatically for you each day. Alternatively, you can set up the payments yourself, or literally put aside the physical money.

Many find that the 1p challenge is a fairly accessible way to save a decent chunk of cash, particularly with the ease of Monzo doing it every day for you. As someone who was getting a little anxious about her lack of savings at the beginning of the year, it certainly seemed like a simple way for me to start putting some money aside without too much hassle (read: zero hassle).

What’s the catch?

There’s no catch, though saving increments of 1 penny a day sounds like nothing, it really does add up. By December, you’ll need to find over £100 over the course of the month – but because it’s small payments each day, it can sneak up on you.

Me four months ago:

TikTok content

Can I do the 1p challenge without the Monzo app?

If you don’t have a Monzo account, there’s nothing stopping you from doing the 1p challenge on your own time – you’ll just need some form of chart to track your progress and keep on top of the amounts each day. Another option is to make bulk payments each month, of course – or set them all up at the beginning of the year. Here’s what you do:

Transfer the money via online banking.

It’ll take a little organising, but you may be able to make a daily payment into your savings account, depending on your bank. If one-penny increments aren’t allowed, it’s probably best to transfer a bulk monthly payment, which I’ve outlined below. (Of course, it sort of defeats the point of the ‘daily’ challenge – but it saves a lot of time.) Sadly, Monzo is the only bank that offers a fully automated service.

Transfer the physical cash into a money jar or box.

There’s nothing wrong with keeping it old school – if you have the coin. Put each amount aside each day and watch your money grow.

1p challenge daily payments

Monzo offers a handy print-out chart here – it details every payment for the 365 days, should you want a physical piece of paper to tick each one off with when you’re transferring manually.

1p challenge monthly payments

If you’re doing the 1p challenge without the help of an automated app, it might be best to simply transfer the amounts monthly (as above). Here’s what you’ll need to save:

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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