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DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
New. Top all-rounder 0% credit card We told you about 'debt' all-rounder credit cards - which combine 0% spending and 0% debt shifting - a month ago. Yet we make no apologies for doing it again as the top picks have since got better. And as it's a 2for1, it's only one application on your credit file, which is good as too many in a short time can affect your ability to access credit. The two top all-rounder cards are the two LONGEST 0% spending deals available. That's where new purchases on the card are interest-free for a set time. Though as this is new borrowing, be careful - only do it for planned, NEEDED one-offs (eg, a new fridge), where you've budgeted and can afford the repayments. Plus, they both let you do a 0% balance transfer - where the new card pays off debt on existing cards, so you owe it, but it's interest-free. This means your repayments clear the debt, not just cover the interest. - Use our 0% eligibility tool to see which card providers will accept you - this minimises unnecessary applications.
The golden rules... |
£300 Ninja air fryer & multi-cooker for £165 with code - cheapest we've ever seen it. MSE Blagged. With 11 functions including air fry, slow cook & steam. 4,000 available. Ninja NHS prescriptions to rise to £9.90 in England on 1 May - can you get 'em cheaper? Almost one million people are missing out each year by not buying a season ticket - see prescription price hikes. £1 to £6 ex-high street clothes, shoes & accessories via 10% off code, plus free delivery. MSE Blagged. Everything5pounds (well, it's not all £5) sells a mix of ex-high street & non-branded items. Everything5pounds Are you one of 5.7 million missing out on a £160/yr water bill cut? Every water company (in England & Wales) has a social tariff scheme for those on low incomes which can lower bills or cap what you pay. Many firms have just updated their criteria for 2024 - to see if you qualify, check our firm-by-firm explainer. A YEAR's 2for1 at 400+ UK gardens (including Leeds Castle, Haddon Hall) + free seeds, with £9.50 mag. Always popular - just one visit often saves you the cover price. Gardeners' World Ends Thu. HOT superfast 500Mb Sky broadband '£26.45/mth'. Sky newbies can get this Sky 500Mb broadband & digital line deal for £32/mth, available to 60% of homes. Plus, CLAIM a £100 prepaid Mastercard or voucher within 4mths and, factored in, that makes it equivalent to £26.45/mth over the 18mth contract. You pay £5 upfront but get that back as bill credit. See all top broadband deals: MSE broadband comparison. Flogging clothes on eBay is now free (though you'll still pay on hats, shoes & more). The auction site's taking on Vinted by scrapping fees on clothes listings. See what's free and what isn't in eBay selling. Spotify prices to rise by up to £24/yr - check if you can save. See Spotify hikes. FREE Lego Harry Potter, Animal Crossing or Friends toy. At Smyths stores this weekend, limited stock. Free Lego |
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Home insurance costs UP over 40% Check NOW if you can LOCK IN a price till 2025 & save £100s Home insurance costs are up a HUGE 41% on average - the biggest yearly rise since research firm Consumer Intelligence started tracking prices a decade ago. Renewal prices have more than doubled for some, with labour and material costs both having risen, making claim costs higher. So EVERYONE should check now whether they can save, lock in a decent price today, and forestall any rises. Our Cheap home insurance guide shows you how in detail, but in brief... NEVER auto-renew. Always check what's out there. Your insurer's not necessarily going to have the market's cheapest policy, as Justin found: "My home insurance renewal was up 111%, from £353 to £745, even though there have been no claims for 5+ years. Taking your advice, I used a comparison site and got a like-for-like quote for £411. While still an increase, it's easier to stomach. Many thanks."Establish what cover you need. Everyone should consider contents cover, but buildings insurance is typically only for freehold homeowners (though do check your lease/contract). To work out what's covered by each, imagine turning your home upside down. If it falls, it's contents. If it stays, it's usually buildings. - Contents insurance: beware underinsuring. If you're thinking "I'd never claim for everything", and only insure half your contents' worth, you may only get half the payout. Use a contents calculator. - Buildings insurance: beware overinsuring. What counts is how much it would cost to rebuild your home if it were knocked down or gutted by fire - usually less than its market value. Use a rebuild cost calculator. COMBINE comparison sites for 100s of quotes in minutes. These sites speedily zip your info to dozens of insurers. Don't just use one though, as a) they cover different insurers, and b) they can have different prices for the same firms. Our current order is 1) Compare The Market*, 2) MoneySupermarket*, 3) Confused.com* (see how we order it). These sites are best for those with standard circumstances - if that's not you, and you find it tough to get quotes, see help if you're struggling to get insurance. When it comes to getting quotes, timing matters. The nearer you get to renewal, the more expensive your cover will be - our analysis shows, on average, the cheapest time to get quotes is 21 days ahead of your renewal, though a few days either side won't matter much. Watch Martin's video on why timing is everything from his ITV show. Now see if you can beat your cheapest comparison site price. If you've time, add insurers that comparisons miss, plus promo deals and cashback sites - doing so could bag you a cheaper price. - Coverbaloo* gives a £25 Amazon voucher (comes within 90 days). - Urban Jungle* gives a £15 Amazon voucher after seven months when you use code MSE_OFFER. - Home Protect* gives the option of a food hamper or five bottles of wine (comes within 90 days). - Biggie Direct Line doesn't appear on comparisons and can be competitive for some. - If you're a member of cashback sites Quidco or Topcashback, you can do a comparison through them, and get up to £34 back. But check prices are the same (or cheaper) as through the main comparisons. See cashback help info. Haggle. Want to stick with your existing firm? Tell it this but ask it to match your cheapest price from steps 3 and 4 - it will often work. See home insurance haggling help. Not at renewal? It's still worth checking if you can save. Check prices now and if you can make a substantial saving, provided you haven't claimed this year, you can cancel your policy and usually get a pro-rata refund if you paid upfront, minus a £35ish admin fee (though you won't earn the year's no-claims discount). Plus you forestall rises for another year. See switching home insurance mid-year for more help. Ensure the policy's right for you before buying. Go through the main terms to check you're happy, and check the provider is regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. And remember, if you have a claim unfairly rejected, you have a right to escalate any complaints to the free Financial Ombudsman. |
New. FREE £21 when you spend £5+ online. MSE Blagged. Newbies to cashback site Quidco get an extra £21 cashback when they sign up via our special link & buy something via it costing £5 or more. Full info in Quidco deals. NS&I's British Savings Bond launches with a 'meh' 4.15% for 3yrs. Announced in March's Budget, the account can easily be beaten by many standard accounts. See our full analysis. New. Get £50 cashback when you invest £250. If you plan to invest, this Wealthify deal offers a tidy boost, though it's not as strong as it's been in the past. Keep the £250 invested for at least 12mths & you'll get £50 cashback. This isn't a Wealthify recommendation - we don't do investment tips - just if you're going to use it anyway, you can get cashback. Full info in Robo-investing cashback. £74 Bondi Sands eight-piece self-tanning set for £35, via code. MSE Blagged. 2,000 available. Bondi Sands 'I saved £1,000 a year reviewing my Direct Debits thanks to MSE.' Our success of the week comes from Sarah, who said: "I have just reviewed all my Direct Debits, prompted by MSE, and have saved just over £1,000/yr. I used to work for a bank & assumed no savings could be made but the review was well worth it. Thank you for the help & your app, it is much appreciated." If we've helped you save (on this, or owt else), send us your successes. Ends Fri. Greater Anglia train ticket sale, including £12 same-day London-to-Cambridge return. For travel until 11 June, with no limit on numbers available. Just the ticket |
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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THIS WEEK'S POLL What proportion of your income do you spend on your mortgage or rent? Take what you pay on your mortgage or rent (including any service charges or ground rent but NOT council tax, insurance or other bills), and let us know roughly what percentage of your monthly take-home pay/income that is. Vote in this week's poll. Almost one in five MoneySavers could be missing big water bill savings. Following 1 April's 6% average rise in water bills (in England and Wales), we asked you how your bills are worked out. More than 4,000 people responded - and two-thirds (67%) of you have a water meter. A meter is likely to save you money, according to Martin's rule of thumb, if you've more bedrooms in your home than people, or the same number. Yet almost one in five (17%) of respondents in these households DON'T have a meter, potentially missing big savings. See full poll results. |
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MONEY MORAL DILEMMA My daughter is selling the clothes I bought her - should she have offered them to me first? Last year, I bought my daughter some new clothes to help her out as she's been struggling with money. I recently saw that she's put them up for sale on a popular buying and selling app. We wear the same size and I would have loved them. Should she have asked me if I wanted them before trying to sell them, or at least offered me a share of what she gets for them? Enter the Money Moral Maze: My daughter's selling the clothes I bought her | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs |
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MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (TUE 9 APR ONWARDS) Tue 16 Apr - This Morning, phone-in, ITV1, 10.15am |
CANDY FLOSS, EYELASHES AND IPHONES - WHAT WEIRD VENDING MACHINES HAVE YOU SEEN? That's all for this week, but before we go... after MSE James recently spotted a vending machine selling frozen ready meals at his local train station, we wanted to know what weird and wonderful things you've spotted in these machines. Sweet-toothed shoppers can get their fix with candy floss in Camden, London, strawberries in Holland, cakes in Texas and green-tea ice cream in Japan. Can you guess where you can get baguettes and cheese... bien sur, c'est la France! And apparently you can grab false eyelashes in Sunderland, and iPhones in Qatar - you'll need more than a few coins to get one of those. Perhaps the most useful, spotted by a MoneySaver in Hong Kong, was the machine selling umbrellas - surely a business that would thrive in the UK. Let us know your weird vending machine sightings in our Facebook, Twitter and MSE Forum conversations. 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 barclaycard.co.uk, virginmoney.com, natwest.com, comparethemarket.com, moneysupermarket.com, confused.com, coverbaloo.co.uk, myurbanjungle.com, homeprotect.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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