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Lots of people have a Stocks and Shares ISA. Not that many of them become millionaires from it (although some do).
Going about things in the right way in 2025 and beyond could help me aim for a million. Here are two things I plan to do to help me on my way to that goal.
Maximising contributions
To give myself the best chance as I aim for a million, I will try to maximise my contributions.
Each tax year brings a new allowance for a standard Stocks and Shares ISA of £20k.
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But every investor is different. So, even if I do not have a spare £20k to invest, I will still seek to maximise my contributions by putting as much into my ISA on a regular basis as my personal financial circumstances allow.
I also want my money to work as hard for me as it can. That will involve trying to make the best possible investment choices. But it is also important to try and minimise the impact of fees, charges, and commissions along the way.
So, my approach is to take time to review different Stocks and Shares ISAs on the market and choose the one that looks best for my own financial circumstances and objectives.
One final way I maximise my contributions is by reinvesting any dividends I earn along the way rather than taking them out of the ISA as cash.
Buy into brilliant companies to hold for the long term
If I could invest £20k a year and compound the value of my Stocks and Shares ISA at 10% annually, I ought to hit my million pound target after 18 years.
So, aiming high in terms of my ISA contributions next year and sticking to that habit over the long term could be lucrative.
As for a 10% goal, it may not sound very difficult (some FTSE 100 shares currently yield that amount or very close to it), but in fact as a compound annual return over the course of 18 years I think it is actually fairly challenging. After all, there are good years in the market but there are bad years too.
So, I would focus carefully on buying into a diversified range of what I think are brilliant companies, when their share price is attractive.
Putting the theory into practice
As an example of a share I am holding that I hope can help me achieve this goal, I would point to Legal & General (LSE: LGEN).
The market for financial services is huge and I expect it to remain that way. Thanks to the large sums of money involved, it can be highly profitable.
That is the case for Legal & General. It has been consistently profitable in recent years. Its retirement-focussed business model has also been highly cash generative, supporting a generous dividend. The yield stands at 8.8% currently. The company hinted this week that it may also increase its spending on share buybacks.
What actually happens in future remains to be seen. In 2025 and beyond I see a risk that market volatility could lead policyholders to withdraw funds, hurting profitability.
But as a long-term holder, I have no plans to sell my shares.