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DON'T believe the fake ads on Facebook |
Ending. Biggest free cash (£125) bank switch and 2% cashback on bills The current hot streak of bank switch deals is ending and there's no certainty they'll return. So if you're fed up with your bank or you just want the freebies, for safety, make a decision now. And switching is easy as it takes just seven working days and the banks move all payments. Here are the top deals. (All require you to pass a not-too-harsh credit check.) Ends 11.59pm Mon. Free £125 + 2% bills cashback - good free cash, great bills account. Both the NatWest Reward* and RBS Reward* accounts give new switchers a free £125 - there's a £2/mth fee but if you use the account to pay your bills by direct debit (energy, mobile, council tax etc) you get 2% of that as cashback. So for single people as a main account, or couples with a joint bills account, this is a strong deal.The £125 will arrive by 8 Feb. As for the cashback, our calculations say an average bill payer will earn £66/year even after the fee. Someone who's a pelican (big bills) could easily earn over £100 a year. How do I get it all? You must pay in a min £1,500/mth (simply the equivalent to a £21,500 salary), switch and log in to online or mobile banking by 7 Jan. The deal is open to new and existing customers who switch from another bank, as long as you haven't had switching cash from NatWest or RBS since Oct 2017. Best of the rest, incl £150 freebie + top service. Most deals require you to move 2-4 direct debits and keep them active, and that you register for online or mobile banking and/or go paperless, so check. Here's what you can get... - Top service + choice of freebie, eg, £150 Expedia vch, Amazon Echo Spot. First Direct* has won every customer service poll we've done and new switchers can claim a gadget, online course (eg, yoga) or the Expedia vch. You can also access its 5% regular saver and most get a £250 0% overdraft. Pay in £1k+/mth (equiv £12,675/yr) to qualify for the freebie and avoid a £10/mth fee. - Free £125 M&S vch with NO minimum pay-in (+£5/mth more in vchs for 1yr if you pay in £1,250/mth). New switchers to M&S Bank* can get the freebies and get access to its 5% regular saver. - Free £50 + £85 after 6mths + £2/mth. Halifax Reward gives new switchers the £50 before the switch completes, and if you pay in £1,500+/mth (equiv £21,500/yr), have used your debit card at least once in six months, pay out 2+ direct debits each month and remain in credit, you get the rest. For full eligibility info, details about when exactly the bonuses come and more deals, see Best Bank Accounts. |
Free letter from Santa. For a reply, post kids' letters to Santa's address (deadline's this week if you need it in Braille). New. Airport lounge access from £15. Blagged code gets up to 40% off, eg, Birmingham (£17-£28), Edinburgh (£16-£21), Gatwick (£15-£32) and Heathrow (£20-£36). Book by 9 Dec, use by end of 2019. See Cheap Airport Lounges. £4.50 M&S, Next, Zara etc 'de-tagged' shoes, dresses, jackets etc. MSE Blagged. Discount website normally sells surplus high street stock at £5 per item + £4 del, but via the best Everything5pounds code we've seen, it's £4.50 incl del. Ends Fri. Super-cheap iPhone XR with low upfront cost - huge 100GB for less than 4GB. The latest iPhone is never MoneySaving, but if you get one, at least do it cheapest. We've blagged a top deal for Vodafone newbies* (via Mobiles.co.uk) to get 100GB data + unltd mins & texts on a 64GB handset for £40 upfront then £36/mth for 24mths - if you use code MSE10 at the checkout. That's less over 2yrs than the cheapest way we've found to get 4GB data on any network. For more deals and help, see Cheap iPhones. Note: only blue & white XRs were in stock as we sent this. The Christmas Deals Predictor 2018, incl Boots, John Lewis & M&S - 92% accurate so far. Black Friday's gone, but from now till New Year we still expect a mountain of deals, so our Christmas Deals Predictor analyses past years to estimate the timing and savings of 60+ deals to help you decide when is best to pounce. |
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Alternative Christmas gift ideas: Give time, effort, memories & love Christmas should be joyous, but it can cause unhappiness, debt and worry where people feel obliged to buy gifts they can't afford. Tit-for-tat giving means many people end up with tat. It clutters up landfill and isn't good for anyone. So with the Christmas countdown on, and as yesterday was 'Giving Tuesday', here's a sackful of alternative gift suggestions. New. 16 ways to sprinkle Christmas magic for kids for free. We've 16 free (or very cheap) traditions to create memories, from driving round after dark to admire twinkly streets, to tracking Santa on Christmas Eve. See MSE Jenny's Free Christmas Magic blog.Join the 'ban unnecessary presents' movement - watch Martin's call to arms. It's gone viral, not just in the UK, but everywhere, as 12m+ have viewed Martin's 3min ban unnecessary gifts video from his show - and it's had 244,000 shares, as a way for people to tell friends and family they want to change how they do things (we're not talking about gifts for kids under the tree, or your spouse. It's about the wider circle). Cristina tweeted: "@MartinSLewis just watched your show... texted everyone... including hubby... to say let's not bother gifting... heart in my mouth... but everyone agreed. Feel like a weight is lifted. Thank you." How to do good at Christmas - give your time to those in need. For those less fortunate, the best gift can be your time. The How to do good at Christmas guide includes being there for isolated older people and more ways to volunteer. Give a gift to charity in honour of your mates - eg, fund lifesaving vaccines for kids. If you're going to spend, as Giving Tuesday suggests, why not ensure the money you spend has a real impact? There's a wide range of Charity Gift catalogues with a raft of ideas such as the vaccines, buying a goat and more. You could give in your name, or in friends' names as a present to them, so the gift really means something. Give time, not money. Print our FREE personal gift vouchers to give as presents. These free Christmas Gift Cheques let you promise to babysit, wash the dishes or even give your partner the 'special' massage they like. Top Festive Fivers (sub-£5 gifts) ideas. In 2012, we ran a contest to create a database of the best sub-£5 present ideas and many still stand, such as creating a balloon box or a Santa sleigh bell. See the best Festive Fivers ideas. |
£130ish Ciaté nail polish £25 delivered. MSE Blagged. Via code on its Advent calendar. 2,000 avail. Ciaté Cheap Now TV - eg, Sky Cinema '£5/mth' (normally £10/mth), Sky Sports '£20/mth' (norm £34/mth). Kids and entertainment packages too. Now TV FitFlop code gets 30% off almost everything, incl 'up to 60% off' sale. MSE Blagged. Ends Sun. FitFlop Magazine freebies incl £19 perfume, £8 hand cream. On the covers of £4ish mags. Magazine freebies New. Train complaint? The new Rail Ombudsman can now award up to £2,500 compensation. For delays and bad service, eg, broken Wi-Fi. See train help Earn £15 M&S/Amazon voucher doing quick online surveys. MSE Blagged. Popular site with MoneySavers, where you're paid to fill in surveys and do online searches. For Swagbucks newbies. |
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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There's an overseas card price war with a new Barclaycard entering the fray. It means three cards now pay cashback or interest as another boon on top of already being the cheapest way to spend abroad - as you get near-perfect rates and avoid the typical 3%-ish exchange fee charged on most plastic. Here are the top picks, with some key info first... - With credit cards ALWAYS pay IN FULL each month or the interest dwarfs the gain.
So which is right for me? Worried about ease of acceptance or don't want a full credit check? Then the Starling debit card wins. Make lots of cash withdrawals? Go for a card with no withdrawal fee or interest, so Starling or Barclaycard wins. Mainly spend on your card? Focus on the cashback - Tandem wins, followed by Barclaycard. Do a mix of spending and cash withdrawals? Barclaycard wins. Want to take out currency before you go? Use our Travel Money Comparison to find the best rates. |
£5 Amex cashback on £10+ spends at 1,000s of smaller stores. From Sat, see Amex shop small. £132 VIRGIN MEDIA HAGGLE - SUCCESS OF THE WEEK: |
CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK Help the homeless as temperatures drop. If you're concerned about someone you see sleeping rough, you can send an alert to StreetLink or give it a call on 0300 500 0914. StreetLink will tell local support services in England and Wales where to find them so they can help. It works year-round, but in this cold weather its service is especially valuable. |
THIS WEEK'S POLL If you could cancel Christmas, would you? Christmas is nearly here, and while for some it conjures a picture of family, fun and festive frivolity, for others it means stress, present pressure, debt and chores. So if you could press a button to make the whole thing disappear (and just keep your holiday entitlement), would you cancel Christmas? Outfox the Market has been voted the worst energy supplier for customer service. Last week, 5,042 of you responded to our biannual energy customer service poll. Among the big six, Npower and Scottish Power shared the wooden spoon, while EDF did best. Overall (of firms with 100+ votes), Zog Energy came top while Outfox the Market was bottom of the pile. See full energy customer service poll results. |
MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Should my partner offer to lend me money? I've had a large, unexpected expense that I can't afford to pay. I know my partner has the money, but they haven't offered to lend it to me. I'm a bit annoyed. Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should my partner offer to lend me money? | Suggest an MMD | View past MMDs THE QUICKIES - Debt-Free Wannabe chat of the week: Sealed Pot Challenge (2019) |
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MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (WED 28 NOV ONWARDS) Thu 29 Nov - Good Morning Britain, ITV, Deals of the Week, 7.40am MSE TEAM APPEARANCES (MOST SUBJECTS TBC) Wed 28 Nov - BBC Radio Scotland, Mornings with Stephen Jardine, 10.45am, spending at Christmas |
QUESTION OF THE WEEK Q: I've just signed up to a new cheaper fixed tariff energy deal, but what happens when the fixed period ends? Sam, via email. MSE Andrew's A: Fixed tariffs let you lock in the unit price during your energy contract - offering surety against rising energy prices. Yet when fixed deals end, suppliers usually move you onto their expensive standard tariffs. So make sure you compare and switch before your deal ends - under regulator Ofgem's rules, you can't be charged exit fees for switching away within the last 49 days of your fix. To make sure you're always on the cheapest deal, you can use our Cheap Energy Club - plus we'll alert you when you're nearing the end of your tariff and it's time to switch again. Please suggest a question of the week (we can't reply to individual emails). |
WHAT HAVE YOU BEEN DOING ALL WRONG? EG, HOW YOU EAT CORN ON THE COB That's all for this week, but before we go... last week the internet showed us we've all been eating corn on the cob the wrong way. And it's not the only eye-openingly educational viral story we've seen this year - we've also learnt which way round to use hair grips, how to eat a pizza slice and even which way you should open a banana. So what's the best practical trick you've learned this year? Let us know in our 2018 need-to-knows forum thread. We hope you save some money, |
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. As we believe transparency is important, we're including the following 'un-affiliated' web-addresses for content too: Unaffiliated web-addresses for links in this email natwest.com, rbs.co.uk, firstdirect.com, bank.marksandspencer.com, mobiles.co.uk, tandem.co.uk, starlingbank.com, halifax.co.uk, santander.co.uk, moneysupermarket.com, confused.com, gocompare.com, comparethemarket.com, directline.com, aviva.co.uk, admiral.com, sainsburysbank.co.uk Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) Note MoneySupermarket.com Financial Group Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (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 MoneySupermarket.com Financial Group Limited. To change your email or stop receiving the weekly tips (unsubscribe): Go to: www.moneysavingexpert.com/tips. |
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