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| DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
| 'I'm over 70 and cut my medical insurance cost by £3,400 - thank you' The NHS and its staff are true national treasures. Yet, in recent years even the Prime Minister has called it 'broken'. So no surprise we've seen growing demand for cheap Private Medical Insurance (PMI). This is policy you pay for so that when you need medical help you can usually bypass the NHS. It covers private consultations, treatments and operations - from hips to hearts to toes - and sometimes mental health too. Its main advantages are speed and hotel-like hospital accommodation. It isn't cheap, plus it's a lifestyle choice and unaffordable for many, which means a two-tier system. Yet, as always, if you're doing it our Cheap PMI guide will show you how to cut costs. Here are the brief must‑knows... 1) Do a comparison & get up to £120 voucher/cashback on top. There are only really three underlying comparison engines out there. Most sites you see are just white labels (same thing, different logo) so we aim to find where you get the best perks on top. Do check as many of the three as you can.
2) Already got PMI? Don't just auto-renew... BUT, be careful if you've made recent claims. PMI prices usually rise at renewal each year, so before you know it, they're far higher than when you started. So, no surprise, a comparison often reveals BIG savings. This is great if you've never claimed - switch away. But if you've had treatments within the last five years, and the issue reoccurs within two, a new provider will likely exclude it, as it's a pre-existing condition (do check). If that's an issue, the only route is to haggle with your current provider to try to reduce the cost.
3) The excess has a huge impact. This how much you pay towards each individual claim or - better but costlier - towards all claims each year. A £56/mth policy with no excess reduces to under £35/mth with a £500 excess. So think about whether you want a 'cover everything' policy or a 'cover big things only' policy. One radical strategy is to combine a cheaper, very high excess (£1,000+) policy with self-insuring, where you put cash aside each month in top savings. Then if you need to pay the excess or have smaller treatments, you have the money. This way, you're covered for bigger treatments, but for the rest you're NHS or pay-as-you-go private. 4) PMI can be a great employment perk, even if your employer doesn't pay (as it's often cheaper), but... if you need treatment and claim, and then later decide to leave your employer, check whether you'll be able to continue your membership with the healthcare firm on the same terms. If not, you may be unable to get a new insurer to cover that pre-existing condition and it can be a nightmare. 5) Confused, can't find what you want or need an expert? Use a broker - it saved Marie £3,400/yr. If you're confused or have conditions that make finding a policy hard(er), a broker can help. As Marie emailed us last week: "As a 70+, active person I was aghast when my PMI rose to £6,000 with a provider I'd been with for over 40 years! I followed Martin's tip and found a helpful broker who helped me to ensure I was going to buy like-for-like cover at a more affordable rate. I am happy to report I was offered £2,595/yr [saving £3,405/yr]." You can get advice via the comparisons above or look a broker up on the Association of Medical Insurers and Intermediaries register. Most brokers are free to you because they take commission from insurers if you get a policy - though check! 6) As always, with any insurance, if you feel your claim's been unfairly rejected, go to the ombudsman. Picking the right policy's only half the journey - the provider needs to deliver if you claim too. Like all insurance, these PMI providers are regulated and must TREAT YOU FAIRLY. If not, make a formal complaint, and if it rejects you unfairly, you can take it to the free Financial Ombudsman Service to adjudicate. |
Don't accept a 'same price' car insurance renewal, most should be LOWER. March is the second-busiest car insurance month, so many are renewing. But be aware average car cover costs are DOWN 11% on last year. So if nowt's changed and your renewal isn't cheaper, don't accept it... put yourself in the driver's seat and use our Compare+ Car Insurance tool, which guides you through every trick in our book. Anne emailed: "My renewal quote was £820. Last year it was £595 for the same car. I phoned my insurer and the best it could offer was a £100 reduction. So I used your Compare+ tool and got the same cover with Aviva for £497! A saving of £323, thank you so much." Stranded abroad by conflict in the Middle East or unable to go on a planned trip? Your rights explained. This is a fast-moving situation, but we're working on answering your key travel questions (and adding more all the time). Battle of the high earners' bank switch bonuses! Now FREE £500. Last week we were surprised how many plumped for Barclays Premier's FREE £400 & free Apple TV* (min £75,000 pre-tax income). Now Lloyds has launched its Premier FREE £500 + 1% cashback (min £5,000/mth pay-in, likely equiv to £85,000 to £90,000 pre-tax depending on pension contributions). Ineligible? See all top free-cash bank switches, which includes Nationwide's free £175, ending Wed. £130 Shark handheld cordless vacuum £70 with code. MSE Blagged. 3,000 available. Shark ICYMI: Longest debt shift cards for years - pay 0% interest till 2029. Last week we told you balance transfer deals are improving with lower fees on long cards and 'definite' rather than up to offers. Top 'definite 0%' picks where all accepted get the headline offer now include Barclaycard's 36mth 0% (3.15% fee) | Tesco 36mths 0% (3.45% fee) | Virgin 35mths 0% (2.95% fee). Full step-by-step & more options in our slash the cost of your credit card debt from last week's email. Golden rules: Repay at least the monthly minimum & clear the card before the 0% ends, or they jump to 24.9% rep APR interest. News. Blue badge holders can now qualify for a Disabled Person's Railcard. The criteria have been extended - now if you've a blue badge, disabled person's bus pass or can't drive for medical reasons you can get the 1/3-off-train-fares railcard. See who now qualifies & how to apply. M&S 'up to 50% off' sale. Not just any sale? See our M&S up to 50% off analysis.
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| WARNING. If you're not good with money, this isn't for you Stoozing is the art of intentionally creating a false debt to make money. In a nutshell, you take a 0% credit card and save the money it gives you at high interest. Martin often talks about what he calls the MoneySaving poetry from the earlier days of this, when former card firm Egg was lending him money at 0% which he then put in their own high interest savings account so they paid him 6% on it! Back then, some even had £80,000+ in their 'stooze pot', offsetting mortgages and making gains of £5,000+ a year. We've a full Stoozing guide, but here's a quick summary...
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| Ends 11.59pm Wed. 145Mb Plusnet broadband '£19/mth' with 'GOOD' service. Switchers can get this 145Mb Plusnet broadband-only deal (no line) for £22.99/mth (available to 70% of homes). Do so and you'll be emailed a £135 prepaid Mastercard from Plusnet - check spam folders if not. There's no price rise in 2026, but it'll be £26.99/mth from Apr '27. Factor all that in and it's equivalent to £19.37/mth over the 2yr contract. Want other options? Use our broadband comparison. PM Law collapse - what to do if you're one of 10,000s impacted. Former clients of the shuttered conveyancing and personal injury law firm say they're struggling to reclaim funds and files. See your options. News. British Gas, Eon, EDF & Octopus to offer low or no Standing Charge tariff pilot from April. MSE and Martin have long campaigned for lower Standing Charges. This isn't that, but it is a mild improvement. See full info, incl Martin's interview with the Ofgem boss about the pilot. Mother's Day deals: £1.29 personalised card, £25 couriered flowers, 40% off Hot Diamonds & more. It's a week on Sunday (15 March) - see our full Mother's Day deals round-up. As Amazon, eBay & others introduce 'Pay by Bank', should you do it? It's quick and easy, but loses you key protections that come with debit / credit cards. See Pay by Bank rights. 90 days' free access to over a million audiobooks & e-books. MSE Blagged. For BookBeat newbies. Read on. Related: Free & cheap World Book Day costumes. |
| AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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| MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Should I ask friends to pay for their meal when I can't remember if I said it was my treat? I recently went to a few pubs with some old friends, then to our favourite Indian restaurant. I had a great time but have little recollection of getting home [pls be Drinkaware]. I assumed we'd split the food bill, but I've found the receipt and I paid it all. I'd have no problem asking for their share, but I'm not sure if, in my merry state, I said the meal was on me! Do I ask them and risk looking a numpty if I said I'd pay? Or say nothing and risk having treated them without them being able to remember? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should I ask my mates if I said I'd pay for our meal? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs |
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| MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (WED 4 MAR ONWARDS) Thu 5 Mar - Ask Martin Lewis, BBC Radio 5 Live, midday |
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