From: MSE's Money Tips - Monday Dec 23, 2024 03:10 pm
MoneySavingExpert's Money Tips Email
Plus... Car Finance Mis-selling News, cheap cinema tix, new cheapest energy fix, charity gifts
                                                           
 
 
 
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New cheapest energy fix
The Energy Price Cap RISE hits 1 January, but you can beat it by locking in for a year to save 9%

The Energy Price Cap, which dictates the rate eight in 10 homes in England, Scotland & Wales pay, will rise by 1% on 1 Jan - meaning most of your bills will rise too. While it's only a slight increase, energy bills are still shockingly high - plus it follows a 10% rise in October. Yet the deals you can compare & switch to are far cheaper than the Cap. That's why Martin's been calling it a Pants Cap - stay on it and you'll miss out on big savings.

On a Price Capped Direct Debit tariff (most are)? You can DEFINITELY save. The Price Cap applies to the 80% of homes in England, Scotland & Wales on standard variable tariffs - the default deals you're put on if you never switch, or your fix ended and you did nowt. If in doubt, you're likely on the Cap, as only those already on fixes or specialist tariffs AREN'T. To help, our comparison tool shows whether your current tariff is capped. The Cap itself is regional (see full Cap rates) and sets a max daily standing charge and max cost per unit of gas & elec - not a total cap on what you pay.

Today's cheapest standalone one-year FIX is 9% cheaper than the 1 Jan Cap. A fix means the rate you pay can't change (though if you use more, you pay more). Savings below are averages, so all links go via our comparison where you get a bespoke result...
E.on Next Fixed 12m v40, 1yr fix. No smart meter needed. Dual fuel or elec-only | Monthly Direct Debit only | Online account 
You can also pay by quarterly Direct Debit or cash/cheque, but it's slightly more expensive and E.on doesn't put this version in comparisons (link goes direct). Switchers save avg 9% compared with 1 Jan Price Cap, including £20 MSE cashback for new customers (2). We can't switch existing customers, so there's no cashback, without which the saving is 8%. £50/fuel early exit fees
British Gas Fixed Tariff v18, 13mth fix. No smart meter needed. Dual fuel, elec-only or gas-only | Monthly Direct Debit / cash / cheque New & EXISTING British Gas customers can save 8.5% compared with 1 Jan Price Cap, including £20 MSE cashback (2). £50/fuel early exit fees E.on Next Fixed 18m v12, 18mth fix. No smart meter needed. Dual fuel or elec-only | Monthly Direct Debit | Online account
You can also pay by quarterly Direct Debit or cash/cheque, but it's slightly more expensive and E.on doesn't put this version in comparisons (link goes direct). Switchers save avg 8.5% compared with 1 Jan Price Cap, including £20 MSE cashback for new customers (2). We can't switch existing customers, so there's no cashback, without which the saving is 7.8% (3). £50/fuel early exit fees
Outfox the Market Merry Fixmas - Outfox the Christmas deal (Dec 25) Fix'd Dual v1.0, 1yr fix. No smart meter needed. Dual fuel only | Monthly Direct Debit only Save avg 8.5% compared with 1 Jan Price Cap. £25 dual-fuel early exit fees
(1) Full details in our energy comparison, which also includes non-standalone tariffs - ie, those that require you to get other products, eg, broadband or boiler cover, to get the price. (2) For some providers we are paid to switch you. You get the same price as if you went direct, except we give a chunk of what we're paid to you, so it's actually cheaper. Win-win. (3) The E.on 18mth fix price is slightly cheaper than the British Gas fix - yet as we discount the MSE cashback over the longer period, when you include that, it's a fraction more expensive on average use.
The cheapest standalone fixes (Eng, Scot, Wales) (1)
Links go via Cheap Energy Club for a personal comparison & as it'll be updated, with things changing rapidly

Q. The savings are compared with the 1 Jan Price Cap... what happens to the Cap after that? Each Cap lasts three months. Most analysts' latest predictions are that the Cap will drop slightly in April and July and then stay roughly the same in Oct - though the further out you go, the more crystal-ball gazing it is. Overall, that means over the next 12mths, if the predictions are right, on average you'll pay around 1% less on the Price Cap than you do now (2% less than 1 Jan Price Cap). For far more info and a Q&A, see Should you fix your energy?

Fixing isn't your only choice to save - for some, other tariff types will win. For most, it's the simplest and safest way to guarantee a saving, but there are alternatives, including discounted Price Cap tariffs (one of which lowers standing charges), specialist electric vehicle tariffs, and the Octopus rapid price-change tariffs, Tracker and Agile (potentially big savings for sophisticated users, but not without risk).

Even with cheaper tariffs I'm struggling to pay bills - what do I do? It's always worth talking to your energy firm. Be polite and straight with it, and make sure you explain if you're vulnerable. There can be hardship & debt grants from energy suppliers. For far more guidance, see our full What to do if you're struggling to pay energy bills, Energy saving tips and Energy mythbusting guides.
 
Track Santa as he delivers presents on Christmas Eve. Peek online or download a free app to track Santa.

News. Leasing now included in car finance complaints, as regulator announces complete 'pause'. The Financial Conduct Authority has formalised its pause on car finance commission disclosure complaints till Dec 2025, and this now includes leasing, increasing the potential number of complainants. It follows the Court of Appeal's ruling that if agreements didn't tell consumers the full commission details and amount, they were unlawful. Yet it's a waiting game to see if the Supreme Court overturns that decision in spring. The pause doesn't stop you complaining - it just delays firms needing to decide on it. Discretionary Commission Arrangement (DCA) complaints are separate. These are the 40% of cases where dealers could increase customers' interest rates to boost their commission (which doesn't include leasing). This is more likely to see a mass redress scheme, and in Martin's view is where everyone should start, so use our free tool to ask if you had a DCA.

When will the big Christmas sales start from Amazon, Boots, M&S, John Lewis & more? See our Christmas Deals Predictor. Plus sales already on from Asos | H&M | Ikea.

New. Longest 0% balance transfer - shift debt to 31mths INTEREST-FREE + get £20 cashback. You can shift existing credit card debt(s) to Barclaycard's up to 31mths 0% for a 3.45% fee - it's been 18mths since we've seen a card as long. And if you transfer £2,500+ in the first 60 days you'll get £20 cashback. Can pay off quicker? The cashback's also on the longest NO-FEE card, Barclaycard's up to 14mths 0%. Both are 'up to' cards - links go via our eligibility calc: if 'pre-approved' there you'll definitely get the full 0% length, if not it can be shorter. More options in Top balance transfers. Golden rules: Repay at least the monthly min & clear the card before the 0% ends, or both jump to 24.9% rep APR interest.

8 days left. Co-op shopper? Use your member rewards cash... or lose it! See Co-op alert.

New. Top 5% easy-access savings. App-only bank Chase* is paying 5% to newbies - just open its free current account (it only does an ID check, not a credit check & you needn't switch to it) to access the savings. It also gives 1% spending cashback & has a top debit card for overseas use. Though remember to check the savings rate on 19 Feb when it's set to fall to 4.75%. See full Chase review. Pay tax on savings? A cash ISA's a savings account you never pay tax on, and you can currently get the same top rate with Moneybox's 5% cash ISA... though here you're limited to just three penalty-free withdrawals a year. More options in Top cash ISAs and Top savings.

50% off Oxfam Unwrapped charity Xmas gifts, eg, 'Let's build peace' gift card £10 (normally £20). Make a donation in someone's name and the full amount still goes to the cause, but at a lower cost to you. See this plus many more ways to do good at Xmas.

Martin's new pod: A crash course in financial need-to-knows... Inheritance Tax | Pension savings | Debt pecking-order | Life insurance | Compound interest & lots more... It's a 'Tell Us' special - thanks to all who suggested topics for Martin to cover, all in the new The Martin Lewis PodcastListen via BBC Sounds | Spotify | Apple or wherever you get your Martin fix.

 
 
How to win at board games this Christmas! Martin's much-discussed masterclass is free to stream on ITVX. For Monopoly hacks, Scrabble strategies, Connect 4 cheats & backgammon bootcamp, watch Martin Lewis: How to Win at Board Games!

Cheap cinema tix - see Mufasa, Sonic 3, Wicked etc this Christmas. See 28 cinema savers.

Faulty goods? Don't be fobbed off with 'it's out of warranty' - MoneySaver Celene got a new £400 fridge-freezer. Martin always says, "warranty schmarranty - if it's faulty the warranty's irrelevant", as our success of the week from Celene shows: "A huge thank you. I had frost build-up issues with my fridge-freezer and contacted the manufacturer many times. Recently, the problem got so bad, I was unable to open the freezer drawers. The firm said there was nothing it could do as I was out of warranty. Following your SAD FART guidanceI got an apology and a £400 replacement fridge-freezer. A godsend & just before Christmas too." If we've helped you save (on this, or owt else), send us your successes.

 
 
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS

 
 

MONEY MORAL DILEMMA

Our child won a high-value Premium Bonds prize - should they share it with their sibling? We've bought Premium Bonds in the names of both our children as a way of saving for them. It's been going well, with both children winning small prizes most months. Recently though, one of them won a much bigger prize, so they now have much more saved than the other. Should this be split between both children, or is that our child's decision to make when they're old enough? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should our child share Premium Bonds prize with their sibling? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs

 
 

MERRY CHRISTMAS - AND AS OUR GIFT TO YOU, WE'VE SUPPORTED A GOOD CAUSE ON YOUR BEHALF

That's all for this week, but before we go... to wish you a Merry Christmas, we've donated a sizeable sum to Unicef, which will go to help children and families across the world. With that in mind, if you still need to buy for family and friends and you want to avoid tat, why not agree to give to good causes in each other's name instead and do a really good deed? Our Charity gift guide is packed with lots of ideas.

We hope you have a wonderful Christmas time and a financially fabulous New Year,
The MSE team

 
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