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DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
Benefits up by 6.7%. Are you missing out on a share of up to £19 BILLION from 21 million unclaimed benefits? Benefits were increased by 6.7% last week (some relating to pensions by 8.5%), impacting the incomes of millions of people, including many who are in work. The increase also means some, at the edges of thresholds, will be eligible who weren't before (as you can now earn a higher amount before you lose benefits). As it's estimated millions are missing out on what they're entitled to, it's worth checking.
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Ends Mon. The last FREE (£175) cash bank switch available is ending. A few weeks ago, five banks were paying for your custom, now just one's left and its offer ends on Monday. Top customer service bank First Direct* pays new switchers a free £175, gives many a £250 interest-free overdraft, and you get access to a linked 7% regular saver. Full eligibility criteria in Best bank accounts. We hope more switch offers will launch in the coming weeks, but can't be sure. £55 beauty box with £400ish of Elizabeth Arden, Rodial, Supergoop and more products. MSE Blagged. It's from Red magazine, normally costs £75, but we've blagged £20 off. Plus you get a digital subscription. Beauty box It's coupon time... 'free' £2.50 vegan burgers, £1.75 off chicken dippers & more. New supermarket coupons. Car finance: reclaim £1,000s. Free complaints tool - DO IT NOW. The clock is ticking, if you haven't checked out Martin's free car finance mis-selling guide & tool, do it now. It's for anyone who got a car, van, motorbike or camper van on PCP or HP between April 2007 and 28 January 2021. You could be due £1,000s back if you had a discretionary commission arrangement, and the sooner you do it, the less chance you have of being timed out. Can you find an 80% off Boots bargain? In store & online. It's not easy, but there's the odd Boots spring clearance gem out there. New cheap 1yr energy fix 8% less than the Price Cap. Outfox the Market's launched the cheapest standalone fix for many. To see how it stacks up, do a personalised Cheap Energy Club comparison or read more in our Should I fix? guide. Ends Tue (23 Apr). £20 cashback on the LONGEST 0% for purchases card. If you need to borrow, until next Tue the longest 0% deal, Barclaycard's 'up to' 21mths 0%, pays £20 cashback to newbies who put £250+ spending on it within 90 days of opening their account. Golden rules: 1) Never borrow willy-nilly, only do it for planned, budgeted-for, one-off purchases. 2) Always pay at least the min monthly payment or you can lose the 0%. 3) Never withdraw cash. 4) Clear the debt before the 0% ends or it jumps to a horrid 24.9% rep APR. Full help in 0% spending cards. |
'I saved £35,000 & will clear my mortgage 10 YEARS early' The days of 1% mortgages have passed. This year alone, 1.5m will see their cheap fixes mature, joining millions of others on higher rates. At the same time, years of low-cost mortgages, plus low pandemic expenditure, mean over £100bn of extra savings have been built up. No surprise then that 'should I save or overpay my mortgage?' is a question I'm asked all the time. So assuming you don't have other, more expensive debt (if so, see should I overpay cards & loans?), here are my need-to-knows... 1. If your mortgage rate is higher than you can earn in savings, overpaying adds up. Let me oversimplify a little... £10,000 saved at 4% earns £400 interest (£320 if basic-rate tax is taken off), yet use it to overpay a 6% mortgage and it saves you £600 interest (try our Mortgage Overpay Calc). So using the savings to overpay is a winner - it's a bit like saving, tax-free, at the mortgage rate. Done right, it can be very lucrative, as this success of the week from Paul shows...
3. If it does add up... TWO KEY CHECKS before you do it. It's not solely about the financial mathematics...
4. And in some cases where the maths doesn't add up, it may still pay to overpay. If you can save at higher than your mortgage rate, use our Mortgage Overpay vs Savings Calc to see the pound-for-pound difference. If savings are substantially better... SAVE. Yet if they're only trivially better, two things to consider...
5. When you overpay, do it the right way - put it towards reducing the term. Overpay and a few firms just reduce your future repayments, and keep you paying over the same period. That may help your cash flow later, but it's not where the big saving comes. The real reduction is from shortening the term so there's an interest gain. So when you overpay, ask it to reduce the capital owed and the mortgage term (also see my old decrease term or overpay? blog). 6. Still on a very cheap mortgage rate? Save the right way. If your mortgage rate is still low, then you'll likely be better off in top savings. Yet save now, so the money is accessible when the deal/fix ends, so it can then be used to reduce the borrowing if needed. You could use fixed savings that mature just before you need the cash. PS: I've focused on overpaying vs saving. There is of course also overpaying vs investing, yet that's impossible to give any definites on as it's comparing a certain outcome with an uncertain one (& investing's outside my wheelhouse). |
This Sat ONLY. £3 IMAX Oppenheimer, Super Mario Bros & more. At 26 Cineworld locations - normally costs up to £23. Not the latest films, but a rock-bottom price if you want to see 'em on the big screen. See this and more cinema savers. Till 30 Apr, 20 to 25yr olds can join students in getting Santander's FREE 4-year railcard worth £100. The Santander student bank account* bank account has long offered a free 4-year railcard. It's open to current 1st-year students, switchers with at least 2yrs left to study & new level 4 to 7 apprentices. Yet now non-students aged 20 to 25 can apply to get the railcard too by opening either: a) the Edge account*, which costs £3/mth but pays 1% cashback (max £20/mth) on bills and supermarket, fuel & travel spending. b) the Everyday account, it's fee-free but there's no cashback. To get the railcard, you need to deposit £500+ & set up mobile/web banking. Full eligibility / info in Best bank accounts. Are you a mental health professional? Martin wanted to do a quick plug for this toolkit from the Money and Pensions Service, which can help you talk to your clients about their finances, as the link between mental health issues and money problems is so strong. It was developed with help from his charity Money & Mental Health Policy Institute. The Sun '£9.50' holidays are back... but are they ever really £9.50? Our analysis suggests otherwise, though decent savings are still possible. For hols from now to Nov 2024. The Sun holidays Achoo! 180 hay fever tablets for £5.95. It's gettin' in to sneezin' season, so see our Cheap hay fever meds. Chase customer? Check if you can get a boosted 5.1% easy-access saver. It'd top our tables if everyone could get it. See if you qualify in Chase savings boost. |
AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK Your chance to ask MPs how they make decisions about how your taxes are spent. Ever wondered what data and evidence is used to develop Government policy? If you have a question on this - it can be about energy, childcare, housing, the environment or anything else you care about - or want to raise an issue about how policymakers use evidence, submit it by Fri 31 May via this online form. You could be picked to raise it directly to MPs and their advisers in June as part of Evidence Week in Parliament (or have it asked on your behalf). |
THIS WEEK'S POLL How do you buy your clothes? With the rise of online marketplace Vinted, eBay's announcement it has scrapped selling fees on clothes and high-street clothing chain Ted Baker's financial woes, this week we want to know where and how you buy your clothes - whether new or preowned, and whether online or on the high street. Vote in this week's poll. One in five spend between 30% and 50% of their income on mortgage or rent. Last week, we asked what proportion of your income you spend on mortgage payments or rent. Nearly 12,000 of you responded, and of those who do pay a mortgage or rent, almost three-quarters (73%) spend 30% or less of their income. Meanwhile, one in five (21%) are spending a relatively high 30% to 50%. Private renters were more likely to be spending a greater proportion of their income keeping a roof over their heads than those with a mortgage. See the full poll results. |
MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Should I tell the previous owner of my home he's due a council tax refund? I recently bought a house, and during the sale process the previous owner made various promises he didn't keep, leaving me around £2,000 out of pocket. After moving in, I followed Martin's guide on challenging your council tax band, and was successful, so I'll save £550 a year. This means the previous owner's likely owed around £8,000 as he'd been paying the wrong rate for years. While it'll be his with one phone call, he probably won't know about it unless I tell him. I've no goodwill towards him because of the broken promises... should I let him know anyway? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should I tell the previous owner of my home he's due a council tax refund? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs |
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MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (TUE 16 APR ONWARDS) Wed 17 Apr - Ask Martin Lewis, BBC Radio 5 Live, 1pm |
FISH, FROGS AND FEATHERS - WHAT STRANGE THINGS HAVE YOU SEEN VIEWING HOMES? That's all for this week, but before we go... when one MSE Forumite was rushed around a flat viewing and kept out of certain rooms, we asked on Facebook what strange experiences you'd had when viewing a property. We heard plenty of bizarre bathroom stories, including a shower you had to kneel in, the homeowner using the toilet with the door open, a frog down the loo, a bedroom cupboard with a shower in it and a bath tub in the kitchen. Away from the bathroom, one poster didn't think a home with four fish tanks built into the walls was particularly fin-tastic, and someone else was left saying 'oh my cod' when they viewed a studio flat that could only be accessed through a chippie. One person's feathers were ruffled when they saw shelf after shelf of dead, stuffed birds, yet we like another's Narnia-esque tale of the bedroom wardrobe you can climb through... to get to another bedroom. Read all MoneySavers' strange sights, and add your own, in our Facebook conversation. We hope you save some money, |
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