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DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
New. Cheapest loan rates slashed! It takes a while after UK base rates are cut for that to filter into the personal loan market, but now it's happened, and with aplomb. Almost across the board, the last fortnight's seen new cheaper loans launch, and today that's accelerated, with People's Choice massively undercutting all other providers, especially for amounts under £5,000. It's done this before... offering super-cheap rates on smaller loans, but then withdrawing them after a week. So for those who need to borrow, and want the security of fixed repayments, applying sooner is likely safer. Detailed help in our Cheap loans guide, but here's the key info... ONLY borrow if it's NEEDED, budgeted for & affordable. Loans need careful thought. They are best for a deliberate, planned, budgeted-for one-off expenditure with lasting gain (eg, repairing a broken kitchen, not booking a holiday). Ask yourself whether you really need it. If not, don't do it. If unsure, don't do it. If it is right for you, then do a budget to ensure you can afford the repayments, and aim to repay as quickly as you can, as that cuts costs.- Doing it to consolidate other debt, eg, credit card debt? See Martin's Is consolidation worth it? briefing. - Already struggling with debt? Ignore this - go straight to our Debt help guide. The UK's cheapest fixed-rate unsecured (a good thing) personal loans. Always go via our Must-Use: Loans Eligibility Calculator (all links below go via it too) as it helps you home in on the lenders most likely to accept you, protecting your credit file by minimising applications. The loans are all unsecured, which means unlike secured loans, they can't automatically look to take away your house if you don't repay (secured means security for the lender, not for you). Here are the best buys by loan amount... £1,000 - £2,999: New. People's Choice 7.1%, Zopa (via John Lewis) 9.9%, but 0% credit card loans may be cheaper. £3,000 - £4,999: New. People's Choice 7.1%, Novuna 9.9% (9.7% on £4,000 to £4,999). £5,000 - £7,499: New. People's Choice 7% (6.5% on £7,000 to £7,499). New. Tesco Bank 7% (need free Clubcard). £7,500 - £25,000: New. People's Choice 5.8%. New. M&S Bank, TSB 5.9% (both up to £20,000). - A word on People's Choice. It's the loans arm of insurer Hastings Direct, and with rates so much lower than the competition, it's unlikely these will be around for long. We also think it is likely to be credit-scoring tightly (ie, accepting a select few), but the link goes via the eligibility calc, so at least you'll see if you've a chance. - All these loans are 'representative APR', meaning sadly only 51% of accepted applicants need to be given the advertised rates (others accepted can be charged more, without limit). However, a few lenders now offer guaranteed rates via the eligibility calc, meaning you'll know the specific rate you'd get before application - you'll see these in your results. PS: While generally you should minimise borrowing, if you're borrowing just below a threshold where rates get cheaper (eg, £7,499 is 6.5% and £7,500 is 5.8%), it can actually mean you repay less if you borrow a little more. See loan rate loophole for how to work it out. How lenders decide who to lend to... As with all lending, when you apply you'll be credit-scored to see if you've been a good credit citizen. Each lender scores you differently based on its own wish list of what is a profitable customer. Yet less known is that lenders also do an affordability score (using your income from your application form, so do include every penny - but don't lie) to see whether you can actually afford to repay. And with loans, affordability is far more important than with, say, credit cards because you're applying for a specific amount, eg, the same lender may accept you for a £3,000 loan but reject you at £10,000. MSE's free Credit Club (available via the MSE App on Apple and Android) shows your credit and affordability scores and helps diagnose any issues. Plus, a version of our eligibility calc is within the Club (so, once registered, you needn't enter more details each time). Can you cut the cost of EXISTING loans? With rates lowering, it's worth checking to see whether you could cut your loan's cost, especially if you previously had a poorer credit score than you do now. The start point is to find a loan with a cheaper APR than you've got. If you can do that, it's important to do further key checks as there can be early repayment penalties. Our step-by-step Cut existing loan costs guide will take you through how to decide. |
Ends Thu. Huge 150GB data Sim just '£5.34/mth' - if you're paying more, why? This new iD Mobile Sim (uses Three's signal) offers a mah-hoos-sive 150GB/mth data, very few use more! So if you're out of contract (text 'INFO' to 85075 to check) it's likely to be a huge saving, plus it allows free roaming in 50 countries. It's £12/mth, but go via our link and you'll be emailed an £80 Amazon or Currys voucher within four months (check spam folders too). If you'd planned on spending there, factored in it's equivalent to £5.34/mth over the 12mth contract. Want different data / network? Use our Sim Deal Finder. £200 Ninja 7.5L air fryer for £99 via code. MSE Blagged. 5,500 available. 7 functions, eg, air fry, pressure cook. Ninja New. Longest 0% balance transfer, shift debt to 34mths INTEREST-FREE. A balance transfer's where you get a new card that pays off old cards for you, so you owe it instead, interest-free. NatWest's up to 34mths 0% (3.49% fee) is the new longest, plus via our eligibility calc (link goes there) you'll know exactly what 0% length you'll get (it's dynamic, from 16 to 34mths) if accepted. If it's long, great! If it's short and the calc shows you've decent odds of getting Tesco's 33mths 0% (3.19% fee) too, that's safer as it gives those accepted its full 33mths 0% and the fee's lower. Golden rules: Repay at least the monthly minimum & clear the card before the 0% ends, or both jump to 24.9% rep APR interest. Full help in Top balance transfers. Stop press! Mastercard compensation likely to be delayed by months. Millions, including non-customers, are in line for up to £70 compensation, but a new legal challenge has delayed it. See full Mastercard update. New. Martin: How the new Winter Fuel Payment REALLY works... All state pensioners (Eng & Wal) will get it this winter, but it's clawed back as tax for individuals earning £35,000.01+. You had many questions, eg, about what counts as earnings, how it works with savings, and how it works for couples (& throuples!) - now we've got answers. I go through them in the latest Martin Lewis Podcast (listen on BBC Sounds | Apple Podcasts | Spotify & elsewhere). Plus MSE Petar's done a great job on this comprehensive Q&A (a deserved plug, as I've driven him crackers getting him to interrogate the Department for Work & Pensions on niche scenarios). £104 of popular No7 beauty & skincare £35. Eight-piece 'Beauty Vault' set. See what's in it & how to get early access. New top savings. Ends Fri. 4.4% 1yr fix & £100 cashback (min £10k, at that it's equivalent to 5.4%) | 5% top easy-access (min £1). Newbies to savings marketplace Raisin - which lets you save and move money between different banks after filling in just one form - get £100 cashback with code WELCOME100 if saving £10,000+. Its top 1yr fix is 4.37%* and top easy-access is 4.25%* (you save with the bank, not Raisin, so get its savings safety protection). These rates are beatable, until you factor in the cashback... on £10,000 over a year, it adds the equivalent of 1% point. Full info: Raisin £100 cashback. Top newbies' easy-access (min £1): Chase* pays newbies 5% AER variable for 12mths on its easy-access saver (just open its free current account, you needn't switch bank to it, and it only does a soft credit-check). Full help in Top savings. Gardening MoneySaving, including 25% off plants, seeds & bulbs. MSE Blagged. This and 27 more tips and tricks for the (wannabe) green-fingered in our new guide. MoneySowingExperts |
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'I found a £40,000 pension' & 'I found an £11,000 work pension' There can't be many more (potentially) profitable uses of time than to spend a bit of it checking whether you've any lost pensions - especially for those who worked for lots of different firms over many years. More than three million pensions are thought to have gone astray, worth an average of £9,500 each (though some can be far bigger). There's full info on how to check whether any of this cash is yours in Find lost pensions, but all the basics are below.
And more importantly... how do you find it again? Whatever type your pension is, whether private, State Earnings Related Pension Scheme (SERPS), final salary, money purchase or anything else... thankfully, the steps to find it are the same. Step 1. If possible, make a list of all your former employers & pension schemes so you know how many you're looking for. You should have details on pension statements, but if you can't find these, try contacting the HR department at old employers to see whether they can help find details of previous workplace pension schemes you might have been part of. If you can't remember any of this, don't give up (jump to step 4). Charlotte found a lost pension: "Hi Martin. I'm new to your programme and newsletter, but just wanted to say thank you so much because after your programme on pensions, I found an old work pension... worth £11,000!" Step 2. Use the Pension Tracing Service. If you can't find any paperwork or can't get hold of an old employer, try the simple, free Gov.uk Pension Tracing Service tool. You can search by employer name, and it has details of over 200,000 different schemes. It will give you the contact details for the pension provider (usually an address and/or phone number), though it won't tell you if you've a pension there. Step 3. Once you've got the details from the Pension Tracing Service, contact the pension firm. It's then up to you to contact that company yourself. Many will have an email address or contact form on their websites, as you certainly won't be the only one in this situation. The ID you'll need to prove that you are you varies by firm, but it'll commonly be your National Insurance number, and possibly your passport or driving licence. The firm should then marry you up with your pension, if it holds one for you. Step 4. No luck or can't remember details? Gretel works a different way, and it's also free. While the Pension Tracing Service has a huge database, you need to remember the names of your past workplaces or of private pension plan providers. If you can't, fintech firm Gretel will do a 'soft search' on your credit report (this doesn't impact your 'credit score') to check your identity and match you with prior addresses where you may have accounts registered (so you needn't remember them to do this, though if you remember any that don't appear on your credit report, that'll help too). It'll try to track down any dormant pensions (and investments, bank accounts, shares, life insurance and Child Trust Funds) for you. It's free because the financial firms pay it (as they've a duty to try and find you, and this fulfils that, likely more cheaply than doing it themselves). Fewer financial institutions are signed up to it than the Pension Tracing Service, but once you register, it will redo your search every two weeks, so if a new firm joins it and there's a new hit, it'll let you know. Find deceased relatives' lost pensions too. If a family member has died and you're responsible for their estate, or you're the beneficiary, you may be able to reclaim any pensions that person had lost (though you'll need the will as proof that anything found is due to you). See how to recover deceased relatives' assets. |
Disney+ £2/mth for four months (normally £5/mth). For new & returning subscribers (and we've even a way that a few with existing accounts can get it). Full info in £2 Disney+. Travel in London often? A railcard could save you £100s on Tube, DLR & Elizabeth line fares. See whether you're likely missing out in TfL discount blog. 'I saved £450 on my car insurance.' [You should be paying far less than last year.] Success of the week. Car insurance premiums are down 17% year-on-year, so if you get a renewal for the same price as last year, don't assume it's a good deal. Instead use our Compare+ Car Insurance tool to see if you can beat it. The tool includes all our tried and tested tips to cut the cost. Rob emailed last week with his saving: "I followed your tips and got quotes 26 days before (the sweet spot) and used three comparison websites. My original insurer couldn't match any of the quotes. Thanks to you I've saved over £450." If we've helped you save (on this or owt else), send us your successes. 100 days' free access to over a million audiobooks & e-books. MSE Blagged. For BookBeat newbies. Read on FREE festivals & carnivals, including West End Live, Eat:Festivals, Ipswich Music Day. Longing for Glastonbury vibes on a more manageable budget? We've listings of festivals with free entry across the UK. Free festivals New. £28 EXTRA cashback with £5+ spend. MSE Blagged. 5,000 available. New Quidco members only. Quids in |
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK Have you ever used the Energy Ombudsman? Fill in our short survey and share your experience of making a complaint about an energy supplier to the Energy Ombudsman. This'll help inform our campaigning work. Take the survey. |
MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Should I replace my son's Pokémon encyclopaedia that I gave away? As our kids are getting older, we had a massive clear out of toys, clothes and books that they no longer use. I asked my son, aged nine, to go through them and pull out anything he wanted to keep, but rather than checking, he said he knew there was nothing he wanted. One of the things I gave away was his Pokémon encyclopaedia, which it turns out he still liked and used, so he's very sad. Should I replace it, or is this the right time for him to learn a lesson? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should I replace my son's book that I gave away? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs |
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MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (TUE 17 JUN ONWARDS) Thu 19 Jun - Ask Martin Lewis, BBC Radio 5 Live, noon |
Important. Please read how MoneySavingExpert.com worksWe think it's important you understand the strengths and limitations of this email and the site. We're a journalistic website, and aim to provide the best MoneySaving guides, tips, tools and techniques - but can't promise to be perfect, so do note you use the information at your own risk and we can't accept liability if things go wrong. What you need to know This info does not constitute financial advice, always do your own research on top to ensure it's right for your specific circumstances - and remember we focus on rates not service. We don't as a general policy investigate the solvency of companies mentioned, how likely they are to go bust, but there is a risk any company can struggle and it's rarely made public until it's too late (see the Section 75 guide for protection tips). We often link to other websites, but can't be responsible for their content. Always remember anyone can post on the MSE forums, so it can be very different from our opinion. Please read the Full Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy, How This Site is Financed and Editorial Code. Martin Lewis is a registered trade mark belonging to Martin S Lewis. More about MoneySavingExpert and Martin LewisWhat is MoneySavingExpert.com? Who is Martin Lewis? What do the links with an * mean?Any links with an * by them are affiliated, which means get a product via this link and a contribution may be made to MoneySavingExpert.com, which helps it stay free to use. You shouldn't notice any difference; the links don't impact the products at all and the editorial line (the things we write) isn't changed due to them. If it isn't possible to get an affiliate link for the best product, it's still included in the same way. More info: See How This Site is Financed. Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) Note MONY Group Financial Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA FRN: 303190). MoneySavingExpert.com Ltd is a company registered in England and Wales. Company Registration Number: 8021764. Registered office: One Dean Street, London, W1D 3RB. MoneySavingExpert.com Limited is an appointed representative of MONY Group Financial Limited. To change your email or stop receiving the weekly tips (unsubscribe): Go to: www.moneysavingexpert.com/tips. |
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