From: MSE's Money Tips - Tuesday Apr 23, 2024 08:41 pm
MoneySavingExpert's Money Tips Email
Plus... new top 0% debt shift, Is solar worth it?, top savings, 'I saved £2k on car insurance'
                                                           
 
 
 
DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads
Lots of scam ads litter social media and even newspaper websites - some of these lie that we or Martin promote Bitcoin, binary trading etc. See Fake ads warning.

 
 
 

Two new top 0% balance transfer cards. Shift existing debt to 'up to' 28mths INTEREST-FREE. Save £100s or £1,000s?

Can't afford to clear debt? Check your eligibility to shift to 0%, especially as standard APRs are now a horrific 35%

The average credit card interest rate for purchases has jumped four percentage points over the last year - now it's a shocking 34.7% (so £347 interest on £1,000 static debt over a year) according to financial information site Moneyfacts. So check what you're paying now - frankly if it isn't 0%, you need to see if you can fight it. The core weapon is a balance transfer, that's when you get a new card that pays off debt on your existing card(s), so you owe it instead but at 0% interest - this means your repayments clear the actual debt, not just mostly cover interest. Two tips first...

A mobile phone showing our 0% eligibility checker on its screen. The heading reads: "95% chance of approval." Underneath that it says: "95 people in every 100 who apply with your circumstances are likely to get the card. Apply now." Image links to our 0% Balance Transfer Eligibility Calculator.1. Don't 'just apply', as that can hit your ability to access credit. Go via an eligibility calc. In two minutes, our 0% eligibility checker shows your card-by-card acceptance odds, and some get pre-approved for top cards, so you can home in on those most likely to accept you without impacting your ability to access credit.

2. If you've a choice, go for the LOWEST FEE within a 0% time long enough to clear your debt. Generally, the longer the balance transfer, the bigger the fee, eg, a one-off 3% of the amount transferred (£30 per £1,000). So if you can clear your debt quicker, go for a shorter deal to minimise fees. Unsure? Play safe, go long.

Barclaycard
Link goes via eligibility or apply direct* - Up to 28mths 0% (some get 14mths)
- 3.45% fee
- 24.9% rep APR after Longest 0%, but it's an 'up to'. Whether you get the full 28mths 0% depends on your credit history (if our eligibility calc shows you're pre-approved, you WILL get the full 28mths). If not, you could get just 14mths, though it says only about one in five of those accepted get this.
New. Lloyds Bank
Link goes via eligibility (not available direct) - Up to 27mths 0% (some get 14mths)
- 3.2% OR 3.49% fee
- 24.9% rep APR after A possibly lower fee, but another 'up to'. However, if you're pre-approved in our eligibility calc, you'll definitely get 27mths with a lower 3.2% fee than Barclaycard. If not, you could get just 14mths and/or a higher 3.49% fee.
Boosted on Thu.
Virgin Money
Link goes via eligibility or apply direct* - 27mths 0%
- 3.25% fee cut to 3% from 9am Thu
- 24.9% rep APR after Longest DEFINITE 0% - all accepted get 27mths. If you've a decent eligibility chance and aren't pre-approved for either card above, it's a decent option, as if you're accepted you know exactly the 0% length and fee. And from Thursday, it'll arguably be the best of the longer cards, both as it's a definite 0% period and the fee is cut to the lowest of the long cards.
NatWest
Link goes via eligibility or apply direct* - 13mths 0%
NO fee
- 24.9% rep APR after Longest NO-FEE 0%. If you can clear the debt within 13mths, this NatWest card (also offered by sister banks RBS* and Ulster) will cost absolutely nothing, and if accepted you'll definitely get this deal.
Top-pick newbies' 0% balance transfers (longest first)

ALWAYS follow the Balance Transfer Golden Rules:
a) Never miss the minimum monthly repayment, or you could lose the 0% deal and it'll cost far more.
b) Aim to clear the card (or balance-transfer again) before the 0% ends, or the rate rockets to the higher APR.
c) Don't spend or withdraw cash. It usually isn't at the cheap rate and withdrawals may hit your ability to get future credit.
d) If you don't transfer at application, you've usually only 60 to 90 days to get the 0%. Do check with your card.

Quick balance transfer FAQs (click links for Martin's answers)
Q. Is it worth applying if my eligibility odds are low? | Q. What if my credit limit isn't big enough? | Q. Can I shift debt to existing cards too? | Q. Should I try to pay off my biggest debt first? SPOILER: NO.
Full help and info, including options for poorer credit scorers, in Best balance transfers.

 
Barclaycard customer? You could be in debt YEARS longer paying DOUBLE the interest. The minimum most have to repay will drop from July, and if you're not careful, the impact could be very costly - see help, what to do and Martin's analysis in Barclaycard customer min payment change help.

Secret Sales code: Extra 20% off reduced Nike, Calvin Klein, Asos and more - we even found a £160 dress £13. MSE Blagged. High-street & designer stock at reduced prices. 4,000 codes available. Secret Sales

New. Top savings if you've £10,000+, 5% 'easy access' plus £50. Savings marketplace Raisin lets you save and move money via different banks after filling in just one form. Right now, newbies to it who open Paragon's 5% AER* easy-access savings via it (link takes you there) and use code MSMG5024 by 30 April get £50 cashback after six months as long as you've kept £10,000+ in (so it is easy access, but cashback needs a min balance). The next top equivalent is Kent Reliance 4.96% AER (min £1,000). Full info in our Raisin write-up. For far more choice, including top fixes, see Top savings and Top cash ISAs - the top easy-access there pays 5.17% right now. All accounts have full UK £85,000 savings safety protection.

Grüum face, body & hair bundle £4 delivered (normally £29). MSE Blagged. Just pay for postage. Includes shampoo bar, facewash bar and body butter bar. 15,000 available. Grüum

'I saved nearly £2,000 using your car insurance tool.' Our success of the week comes from Dawn: "Thanks to your Compare+ tool, I saved nearly £2,000 this year. My renewal came in at £2,947, but I followed your guidelines and got a quote for £1,027. Then I remembered Martin's advice about checking Direct Line, and it gave me a £1,946 saving. Thanks everyone, we need more sites like yours and I think Martin should be Chancellor." [Ta but nooooo - Martin.] If we've helped you reclaim or save (on this, or owt else), send us your successes.

Updated. Are solar panels worth it? New figures from the Energy Saving Trust, and the new Price Cap, mean the numbers have changed if you're thinking of getting them. See our Are solar panels worth it? guide.

Don't put bananas in the fridge... It's Stop Food Waste Day tomorrow (Wed). See 13 ways to stop wasting food.

Please report 'sorry, we're experiencing unusually high call volumes' messages. So far, we've had 20,000 reports to our unusual call volumes tool (please bookmark it), where you tell us when firms (banks, broadband, mobile, energy, water etc) use these messages. We need a few more weeks' worth to establish if the pattern is consistent, ie, they're lying by having it for every call. So please take 30 seconds to report them.

Martin's new podcast: Should you save or overpay your mortgage? | Shop-staff insider secrets | 100,000s need restart Child Benefit claims These and more in the new The Martin Lewis Podcast. Listen via BBC Sounds | Spotify | Apple or wherever you like to get your Martin fix.

 
 

Martin: 'The minimum wage is now £11.44/hr, yet 350,000+ are still UNDERPAID. Check & recover what you're due'

Even M&S, WHSmith and employment agencies get it wrong. Pls help SPREAD WORD

Martin Lewis, MoneySavingExpert.com founder, whose image links to his official MSE biography page.At the start of this month, UK minimum wage rates were increased - forcing employers to boost incomes for the lowest-paid workers. Yet the Low Pay Commission says 365,000 are being underpaid, ie, paid LESS than they legally should be. So if you're on or just above minimum wage, I want to tool you up to detect if you may be being short-changed and, if you are, how to be paid what you're legally entitled to...

Apprentices & under-18s: £6.40/hr Aged 18 to 20: £8.60/hr Aged 21+: £11.44/hr
The current UK statutory minimum wage rates (in place since 1 Apr 24)
Applies to all workers, even if not paid hourly. Eg, aged 21+, working 35hrs/wk, salary must be £20,820+/yr.

The main ways you may be being underpaid when on/near minimum wage. Scan through my summary list here and if any may be you, read the full info in our Minimum wage: Are you being paid enough? guide.

UNIFORM, TOOLS & SAFETY CLOTHING. If you must buy them, the cost shouldn't take what you get below the equivalent minimum wage over your pay period (eg, monthly, if paid monthly). This is the most common failing. YOU SHOULD BE PAID FOR ALL WORKING TIME. Including overtime, security checks, handover meetings, opening up, being on call & more. So if you get less than minimum wage once these are factored in, you're owed. CAN'T 'TOP UP' WITH TIPS OR OVERTIME. These must be on top of minimum wage. COMMISSION ONLY? Employers must top up with a salary to meet the minimum wage if you don't earn it. ACCOMMODATION COSTS. Pay can only be reduced by a maximum £69.93/wk below minimum wage if your employer provides accommodation. This includes charges such as rent, gas, electricity, furniture and laundry. NOT 'REAL' APPRENTICESHIPS. 18+ & apprenticeship has no structured training? You may be on the wrong rate. ENSURE YOU GET THE MIN WAGE RISES. It should have just increased, as it does every April, plus it should increase on your 18th and 21st birthdays, taking effect in your first full pay period after the change. Again, if any ring possibly true, jump to our Are you being paid enough? guide, and if you think you aren't (or weren't based on old rates), you've a legal right to be paid more and to back pay. It can be, though isn't always, simple to do and you can remain anonymous when complaining, as explained in how to claim back underpaid minimum wage.

In June 2023, even M&S was named & shamed, so don't think: 'I work for a big firm, so it must be correct'. Last year, over 200 companies - including M&S, WHSmith, Lloyds Pharmacy and Argos - were named and shamed by the Govt for minimum wage failings. Some explained why and talk about complexities, but even so, it shows no matter who the company or employment agency is, don't assume it got it right...

The real living wage is different! Each year, a panel of professionals for the Living Wage Foundation calculate the minimum workers aged 18+ should be paid for a basic standard of living. It's currently £12/hr (£13.15/hr in London), so higher than the state minimum wage. 14,000+ businesses have volunteered to sign up to the scheme, so all their employees aged 18+ must earn at least this. I'm a supporter of this scheme - see my vid on why employers should sign up.

You may be thinking: 'Doesn't the state have a national living wage?' Yes, BUT... in 2015, then-Chancellor George Osborne nicked the name and rebranded the over-25s' (now over-21s') minimum wage the 'national living wage', but he didn't choose to follow the amount, nor ensure it's calculated based on living standards, so on MSE I've made the call that we won't use that name - we will still call it what it is, the minimum wage.

 
A month's 'tailored' dog food £3.60 (normally £36) via 90% off code. MSE Blagged. Newbies only. Tails

B&M 20% off all toys, in store only. Includes brands such as Hot Wheels, Lego and Pokemon. B&M toys

FREE Grand Designs Live London tickets. For 4 to 12 May, normally £13 to £16. Grand Designs

FREE £25 when you spend £5+ online. MSE Blagged. Topcashback is bettering the recent bonus from rival Quidco by offering £25 extra cashback to newbies who sign up via our special link and spend £5 or more. Cashback boost

PS: It's the Natasha Allergy Research Foundation week at Tesco. Natasha Ednan-Laperouse died from a severe allergy after eating inadequately labelled food. This week (22 to 28 April), Tesco will donate 10p per 'Free From' range item to the foundation set up in her name that campaigns for allergy research. So if you buy these, do time it right. Free From donation

 
 
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS

 

THIS WEEK'S POLL

How much credit card debt do you have? The cost of living crisis has resulted in many taking on extra credit card debt - in some cases just to cover basic necessities. So this week, we want to know how much credit card debt you have in total and whether this has increased in the past 12 months. Vote in this week's poll.

More than a third of MoneySavers buy the majority of their clothes preowned. Last week, we asked where you buy the majority of your clothes from - more than 5,500 of you answered. The high street is still king for the majority of people, with 46% buying most of their clothes there. However, plenty of MoneySavers buy mainly preowned clothes - 20% from online sites such as Vinted and 18% from charity shops. See the full poll results.

 
 

MONEY MORAL DILEMMA

Should I pay to have the bike my ex-husband got our son serviced? My ex-husband bought our son a second-hand bike that cost £180 for Christmas the year before last. Since then it's been badly damaged a couple of times, and I've paid for it to be fixed professionally. My ex now wants the bike back to sell, saying the money he gets will go into a savings account he's set up for our son. Yet he wants me to pay to have the bike serviced again so it can be sold - should I do it? I've probably paid more for the bike now than my ex did. Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should I pay to have the bike my ex got our son serviced? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs

 
 

MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (TUE 23 APR ONWARDS)

Wed 24 Apr - Ask Martin Lewis, BBC Radio 5 Live, 1pm
Tue 30 Apr - This Morning, phone-in, ITV1, 10.30am

MSE TEAM APPEARANCES (SUBJECT TBC)

Wed 24 Apr - BBC Radio Gloucestershire, Mid-morning with Nicky Price and MSE's Petar, from 11.05am

 

WWII ERA SILKS AND A 72-YEAR-OLD COAT - WHAT'S THE OLDEST ITEM OF CLOTHING YOU STILL USE?

That's all for this week, but before we go... from ancient anoraks to senior socks, last week we asked our social followers about the oldest items of clothing they still wear. The earliest discovery was on Facebook, where one MoneySaver still wears a nightdress inherited from her mother which is made from parachute silk dating back to World War II. There were plenty of 1950s items that are à la mode today - one person has a suede coat purchased in 1952 and struggles to find a cleaner with the know-how to look after it. We heard about a kaftan ordered from the Kays catalogue (what a throwback) 52 years ago and a pair of waterproof trousers bought for a Duke of Edinburgh expedition in 1982, while one MoneySaver is still getting use from their 44-year-old hiking boots. But our favourite is the T-shirt one Twitter follower bought for her husband 26 years ago, which he wore for the births of all three of his children - a good luck charm that may need to be dusted off for grandbabies. Tell us about your oldest outfits in our FacebookTwitter and Instagram conversations.

We hope you save some money,
The MSE team

 
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Founded in February 2003, it is now the UK's biggest consumer help website, with more than 12 million users each month and about 8.5 million receiving this email. In September 2012 it became part of the MoneySupermarket Group PLC. Its focus is simple - saving cash and fighting for financial justice on anything and everything. The site has over 80 full-time staff, more than a third of whom are editorial - researching, analysing and writing to continually find ways to save money. More info: See About MSE.

Who is Martin Lewis?
Martin Lewis CBE is the founder and executive chair of MSE, as well as the founder of the MMHPI charity. He's an ultra-focused MoneySaving journalist and consumer campaigner with his own prime-time ITV programme The Martin Lewis Money Show, Radio 5 Live Wednesday show Ask Martin Lewis and weekly slot on This Morning, among others. More info: See Martin Lewis' biography.

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