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DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
12 easy Christmas planning MoneySavers Gifts, spending, sending parcels, plus gift vouchers, charity, bargains & more The countdown to Christmas has begun. It's less than 20 days away, a time of joy, fun and festivities for many, and stress and shenanigans for others (in Martin's Cancel Christmas? poll, about 30% would if they could). So we want to try to ease the path as much as we can, with these 12 tips to cut costs and save time... Ending this week. Free or charity letters from Santa. The big fella has his elves stationed everywhere to help him reply to all the little people who write to him. Two of those to note are...- Until Friday, there are hordes of elves stationed at Royal Mail, so post a letter by then and Santa will reply at no cost. - Until Thursday, for a suggested £8 donation, the NSPCC elves will send a personalised letter and the money helps less fortunate children - a nice bit of karma. Need to deliver a gift...? If you're buying it, it's almost always cheaper to have an item delivered straight from the retailer, but if you want to send one yourself, our Cheap parcel delivery guide shows how to cut costs. Uncover Amazon Warehouse's big bargains. Hunt down big discounts from the firm's little-known discount outlet using our new Amazon Warehouse Discount Finder tool. Related: Local eBay deals finder | 40+ online shopping hacks. Free Christmas gift cheques & free photo card. If money's tight, why not give time instead? Our printable Christmas gift cheques let you pledge to do something nice (or naughty) such as brekkie in bed, cleaning a car, their favourite massage. What you give is only limited by your imagination. Related: Bag a totally free photo card. 20 free (or very cheap) ways to add Christmas magic for kids. MSE Jenny's Christmas magic for kids blog helps you create lasting memories for little money. Charity gift catalogues mean real impact for Christmas giving. It could be buying vaccines, mosquito nets, or shelter for a vulnerable family. But our charity gifts catalogue guide shows how to give a gift (or possibly all your gifts) perhaps more in line with the original Christmas spirit - far better than tat. (And tell people you're donating, not giving.) Switch online supermarket for a day to save at Christmas - for example, £15 off £60 for Sainsbury's newbies. If you're buying Christmas food online, supermarkets and delivery services offer tasty offers to entice new customers, which we've rounded up in our grocery codes guide. Related: Book your Christmas delivery slots now. The Christmas Deals Predictor. For eight years we've carefully tracked the timing and quality of big firms' Christmas discounts. We've poured that knowledge into our Christmas Deals Predictor to help you pounce when what you need is cheapest, with discounts expected at M&S, John Lewis and Ikea in the coming weeks. Volunteer to help those less fortunate. Find out how to do good at Christmas by donating your time or money. The DemoHoHotivator shows how little sacrifices can create big savings. Forgo your daily coffee in December and you could have an extra £50 in the festive kitty. Try The DemoHoHotivator. Track Santa as he delivers presents. The big fella has quite the journey on Christmas Eve, and a nifty free Santa tracker lets you watch his progress from the North Pole to Northampton (and elsewhere too). Beware gift vouchers... If the firm goes bust, they're often worthless. Plus many have expiry dates. So think carefully about the solvency of the firm, and how quickly they'll be used, before you do it. If in doubt, cash is safer and more flexible. PS: Is it time to ban unnecessary Christmas presents? Do see Martin's now (in)famous Ban unnecessary Christmas gifts blog, which includes an updated video of the original which went hugely viral with over 17 million views and 300,000+ shares. |
Do the ads for diesel-drivers' claims against Audi, BMW, Mercedes & more stack up? World Cup breaks are swamped with ads for redress schemes for diesel claims. Tempted? We've full diesel claim pros & cons. New. Top 2.85% 'easy-access' savings. Rates have continued to crawl up in recent weeks. Coventry Building Society's 2.85% AER account is the new top payer BUT you're limited to 6 penalty-free withdrawals a year. Want unlimited withdrawals? App-only Tandem's 2.55% AER* comes out top. Big name: Nationwide's 2.5% AER* is a rare big name among the best buys, though it only allows 3 penalty-free withdrawals a year. Full info & options in Top savings. 10,000 Vax codes: Pay £100 for normally £400 or £160 cordless vacuums. MSE Blagged. Valid on two models - one is currently £400 at Vax (cheapest we can find elsewhere is £200), the other, £160 at Vax (cheapest we can find elsewhere is £150). Vax code New. 1 year GoHenry kids' spending card £2.94 (normally £36). MSE Blagged. The big-name kids' prepaid card GoHenry* lets them spend, but keeps you in control. It normally costs £2.99/month, but go via this link, enter code AFFMSE15 and top up £10+ and newbies get six months free and £15 credit, equivalent to the monthly cost for most of the next six (all barring £2.94). Free card: Alternatively HyperJar* is totally free, with roughly similar features, though you can't use it at ATMs. Full info's in Top prepaid cards for kids.
£138 of Boots No7 skincare for £41. Boots has put its 'Ultimate Skincare Collection' 10-piece set on offer again. It's normally £85, though its contents are worth £138 if bought separately. No7 skincare How 45 to 70-year-olds can turn £800 into £5,500, Help to Save, regifting & £10 Baileys. Listen to the latest The Martin Lewis Podcast. |
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New. Boiler cover - how to brrrr...ing the cost down by £100s You needn't just stick with your energy firm's cover - take advantage of the competition The fear of losing heat or hot water is powerful as we run into winter. Many energy suppliers use this to upsell you costly boiler and home heating cover. Yet don't feel you must link your boiler cover and energy provider - they can be separate, and standalone deals are often far cheaper. Our revamped Cheap boiler cover guide has full info to help you insulate your wallet, though here's a warm-up... 1. What you need in a policy. Decide what exactly you want covered: is it just your boiler, or extras such as pipes or even plumbing? Don't buy it if you rent as it's a landlord's responsibility to carry out repairs. ALL our top picks below meet our minimum cover levels, which include: An annual boiler service. Most policies require an annual boiler service (costing £60 to £90) or they won't pay out, so getting a plan including these is usually cost-effective. Services are normally carried out March to September. Boiler replacement or a contribution towards a new one if it's beyond economical repair (and under 7 years old). The ability to claim 30 days after the policy start date. Provided the fault wasn't there when you took cover out.2. Top-pick cheap boiler cover. Many of you told us you want a simple choice, so we've tried to do that here, but to be blunt we're listing firms new to us, so we've combed through forum feedback and review sites to ensure what's said is decent (if not always stellar). As we don't have better data than that yet, please do feed back. Now for brief best buys, with more in boiler cover. There's no single cheapest, so check with a few firms, for your circumstances... Cheap cover with high excess. The level of excess - how much you pay towards every claim - has a huge impact. The more reliable your boiler, the more you can hedge towards a higher excess. For dirt-cheap prices, YourRepair* has a high £120-per-claim excess and costs just £1.80/month (so £21.60/year) for its basic boiler-only policy. This rises to £5.50/month for its Home policy*, which also includes pipes, radiators, plumbing and home electricals.Yet the more you cover, the more you may need to call it, and the excess is for EACH CALL-OUT. It may work best combined with self-insuring, where you put cash aside each month in case repairs are needed. Cheap cover with lower excess. Lower the excess from £120 to £95 per claim and the cost of YourRepair (Boiler)* quadruples to £8/month (the rise isn't as high for policies with wider coverage). So also check Ovo's Corgi HomePlan (Essentials)* which, with a lower £60 excess, until next week is reduced to £7.50/month for six months, then £15/month for the rest of the year - so an average £11.25/month. Wide-ranging cover - including plumbing, home electrics and more. In addition to boiler, these also cover drains, toilets, plumbing and home electrics, so you won't need to rely on a range of tradespeople's availability to fix a problem (though boiler firms can have delays). At £120 excess, YourRepair (Home Plus)* is £6.80/month, at £95 excess £14/month, at £60 excess £19/month. Hometree (Your Home)* is £19.95/month with a £95 excess, BUT you can claim a £40 Amazon voucher - factor that in and it's £16.62/month. Do be aware: many providers hike prices after the first year, so be prepared to switch or haggle then. 3. For more choice and options, use a comparison site. If you want to go granular, for a range of excesses & features (for example, with or without an annual service), or if the firms above don't cover your particular boiler, use uSwitch*, MoneySupermarket* or Gocompare. Ensure you know what you're getting though (for example, check against our min cover levels). 4. Understand your rights. YourRepair offers service policies, which are largely unregulated, but it has voluntarily signed up to the Dispute Resolution Ombudsman for complaints. There's little protection if it goes bust, though if you pay monthly that's less of an issue. Corgi and Hometree offer insurance policies, so you can escalate complaints to the Financial Ombudsman in the event of problems (though the annual service itself isn't covered). More in How's boiler cover regulated? |
Ends Fri. Free Pizza Hut Monday to Friday lunchtime buffet for O2/Virgin Media Priority members. Not in Northern Ireland. See Pizza Hut lunch. Who's best to haggle with? Sky, BT, the AA or others? Please vote... Each year we try to gauge success rates, so whether you've got cheaper prices, extra goods (or nowt), please let us know in our call centre haggling poll. 'I saved £700 on my home insurance AND got more cover.' Our success of the week comes from Mick, who emailed: "Many thanks for your recent note on home insurance - I saved £700 as a result. Our renewal premium was £1,109. We got better coverage for £410 using a comparison site, a saving of two-thirds." If we've helped you save money (on this, or anything else), please send us your MoneySaving successes. 3 months' FREE Spotify Premium (normally £9.99/month). It's back - newbies-only, listen ad-free, offline and on mobile, on demand too. Though be ready to pay £9.99/month if you don't cancel before it ends. Not a newbie? Cut costs with our Spotify MoneySavers, including how to get 3 months for £9.99. |
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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THIS WEEK'S POLL Have you haggled with Sky, BT, the AA or any others this year? Did you succeed? It can result in big savings - on anything from digital TV and broadband, to breakdown cover and car insurance. Each year we try to gauge the success rates of those who have done it. So whether you've got cheaper prices, extra goods or better deals, please let us know how successful you've been in this week's poll. Half of you have already done all or most of your Christmas shopping. With the big day fast approaching, 50% of the 5,800 of you who voted in last week's poll said your shopping's finished or nearly finished, with just over one third saying they did some of their shopping during Black Friday and Cyber Monday. However, twice as many men (27%) than women (13%) are yet to start their shopping at all. See full Christmas shopping poll results. |
MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Is it OK to get my friend something for Christmas that's on sale? My friend and I always get each other a Christmas gift, which we spend a mutually agreed £30 on. This year I've found something worth £30 that would make a great gift for them, but it's on sale so I'd be spending less. Should I keep the money I'd save for myself or buy them something extra so I've spent the agreed amount? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Is it OK to get my friend a sale item for Christmas? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma |
MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (WED 7 DEC ONWARDS) Wed 7 Dec - Co-presenting Good Morning Britain, ITV, from 6am MSE TEAM APPEARANCES (SUBJECT TBC) Tue 13 Dec - BBC Radio Cambridgeshire, Mid-morning with Jeremy Sallis, from 10.45am |
FISH AND CHIPS, CORNISH PASTIES AND... BUTTER PIE! TO WHAT FOODS WOULD YOU GIVE HERITAGE STATUS? That's all for this week, but before we go... after UNESCO granted cultural heritage status to the French baguette, we wanted to know which foods you'd say have contributed to UK culture. We saw support for classics such as fish and chips, cream teas, Yorkshire puddings and Cornish pasties, as well as some more niche suggestions - for example, Lancashire's butter pie. Yet most intriguing was the salmon and tomato sandwich, nominated because it was the UK's first mass-produced, pre-packed sandwich flavour. Tell us which foods you'd give cultural recognition to in our Twitter conversation. We hope you save some money, stay safe, |
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 hsbc.co.uk, firstdirect.com, chase.co.uk, kroo.com, tandem.co.uk, nationwide.co.uk, gohenry.com, hyperjar.com, yourrepair.co.uk, corgihomeplan.co.uk, hometree.co.uk, uswitch.com, moneysupermarket.com, sainsburysbank.co.uk, bank.marksandspencer.com 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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