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DON'T believe the fake ads on Facebook |
The energy market is awash with news of price hikes, and horror service from some minnows - a few of which have gone bust. So to help, we've a deal with a rare combo of excellent price and strong supplier service record. So if you've been treated poorly (eg, Outfox the Market has hiked winter direct debits by an avg 40%, causing hardship for many) or you simply overpay, check this out... New. Cheap energy & 'great' service from Bulb - save £240/yr. This new Bulb Vari-Fair deal costs an avg £975/yr on typical use - after the usual £25 Cheap Energy Club dual-fuel cashback and an extra £25 dual-fuel bill credit we've specially arranged. This compares with the avg £1,220 that a Big 6 standard tariff on typical use is expected to cost over the next year. The link above goes via our Cheap Energy Club to compare the deal against the rest of the market.The tariff is nearly the market's cheapest, only beaten by a few minnows on which we have little feedback. In contrast, 76% of the 600 Bulb customers who voted in our recent customer service poll rated it 'great'. As it's a variable rate, prices can change, but there are no exit fees to ditch if they rise. Other key points are: - It's for dual fuel & elec-only, incl Economy 7 (on elec-only, cashback is £12.50, bill credit is £12.50 - so £25 in total). - Bulb pays any exit fees from your current supplier, up to £60 per fuel. - You can't take it with you if you move home. - 100% of electricity & 10% of gas is from renewable energy sources. - You need to pay by monthly direct debit & get paperless billing to qualify. - It's available till 9 Jan, but not on prepay or in Northern Ireland. Know someone with Bulb? You could save even more. It has a long-running refer-a-friend scheme, where the referrer and newbie each get £50 if you switch to this tariff via Bulb. Our deal pays the newbie the same but you don't need to know an existing customer. Yet some who have been with Bulb for 1yr+ may get a boosted offer of £100 for both them and a newbie for the same scheme. The offer will come via email in the coming days but only 3% of its 850,000 customers are due to receive it - and you must get the email to qualify. So if you know someone who's been with Bulb for 1yr+ you may want to wait just in case. Prefer to switch to an energy giant? Many are put off by firms they've never heard of. So we've a special Big Name Supplier Filter in our Cheap Energy Club, or a My Supplier's Cheapest Deal filter if you want to stay put. If you're a member of our club those links take you to the filter. If not, register via those links, then in your comparison look for the filters. |
Easy-access savings rates fall to a miserly 0.63% average - smash 'em with the 1.5% best buy. Figures this week from data analysts Moneyfacts show many put up with pathetic rates - but you must get active to end the rip-off. Our top easy-access pick is Marcus Bank*, a UK arm of US giant Goldman Sachs, at 1.5% AER (min £1) - incl a fixed 1yr 0.15% bonus. More info, incl the popular Post Office 1.45% deal, plus fixed-rate options, in Top Savings. £54ish of Max Factor for £17, incl mascara & lip gloss. See how to get it in the Max Factor trick. 'Boxing Day' sales now on, incl Gap, Kurt Geiger & Miss Selfridge. These days they often start early - good for last-min Xmas prezzies. Full updates as they launch throughout the week in Boxing Day sales. Ends Thu. Plusnet fast b'band & line '£17.67/mth'. Newbies to BT-owned Plusnet can bag that price for avg 35Mb speeds if they pay 1yr's line upfront. Anything sub-£20/mth is good for fast b'band (known as fibre) so this is a Christmas cracker. For lots more options, see our Broadband Unbundled tool. Burger King Whopper 'buy one, get one free'. Buy in Dec, claim freebie in Jan. See how in 2for1 Whoppers. Airport lounge access from £17. Blagged code gets 20-40% off lounges. Eg, Birmingham £17-£28, Edinburgh £19-£21, Gatwick £18-£32 and Heathrow £24-£36. Book by Sun, use by end of 2019. See Cheap Airport Lounges. |
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The Great Perfume Smell-alike Test 2018 (where Primark beat Jo Malone) Many turn to fragrances to treat loved ones, and as perfumes are a classic late Christmas gift, we've a host of MoneySaving tips that are not to be sniffed at. Full help in our 19 Cheap Perfume Tricks, here's just a taste whiff... The top 'smell-alike' perfumes - at a fraction of the cost. Shops such as M&S, Next and Primark sell own-brand perfumes that mimic designer brands. We wanted to see if cut-price versions really do smell similar, or just cause a stink. So for a bit of fun, we recruited 20 of the finest noses from our team to run a non-scientific, blind experiment.We asked them to sample 12 brand-name perfumes, matched against their cheap alternative. In nine cases, the majority of our fragrant panel couldn't tell the difference, or actually preferred the cheap smell-alike. See the full results of MSE's Great Perfume Smell-alike Test 2018, but here are the top five based on the percentage of our testers who preferred the cheaper one or couldn't tell any difference: - Primark 'Pomegranate & Black Tea', 100ml, £8 (vs Jo Malone 'Pomegranate Noir', 100ml, £94). Score: 80% - M&S 'New York', 100ml, £18 (vs Chanel 'Allure', 100ml, £110). Score: 75% - Zara 'Black Amber', 100ml, £10 (vs Dolce & Gabbana 'The One', 100ml, £78.95). Score: 65% - M&S 'Azure Breeze', 100ml, £16 (vs Dolce & Gabbana 'Light Blue', 100ml, £59.45). Score: 65% - Next 'Just Pink', 100ml, £14 (vs Ralph Lauren 'Romance', 100ml, £42.75). Score: 60% Often the posh brand name and look is part of the present, so choose who you give cheap versions to. And some have told us the smell-alikes can be a bit weaker, so you may need more squirts or the occasional top-up. Smell-alike aftershaves exist but are less common, hence the focus on perfumes. Top codes and sales to cut costs + more cheap perfume and aftershave tips. It's not all about smell-alikes... - Codes & sales. There's a 15% off The Fragrance Shop code, plus we've blagged a 10% off The Perfume Shop code. See the guide for ALL Perfume Sales & Codes. - Price trackers check if it's really a bargain. Special sites chart price changes to help you separate deals from duds. Eg, we saw a Jimmy Choo perfume for £78 at Amazon, 40% more than its average price across the year. - Lots more help in 19 Cheap Perfume Tricks. |
Revealed: Shoppers given WRONG sale return rights info by 10 online stores, incl Accessorize & Oasis. See our full return rights investigation + what your real rights are. Overdraft crackdown as fixed daily & monthly overdraft charges set to be banned. Get the lowdown and Martin's view in overdraft overhaul news. Ends Wed. 4GB/mth Sim, unltd mins & texts, '£8.34/mth'. Newbies to Smarty* (uses Three's network) pay £10 upfront each month. Plus, activate a Sim in Dec and you get two months 'free'. There's no min term - if you keep it a year, it's an equiv £8.34/mth. Top Sims Cheap Christmas decorations, incl £25 M&S tree, lights & baubles bundle (norm £35), John Lewis 30% off. See what's avail now + keep updated, as more tend to launch as the big day nears. Cheap Xmas decorations Virgin Wines 6 bottles for £30 (norm £70ish). MSE Blagged. 1,000 boxes avail. Virgin Wines. Be Drinkaware. |
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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'I reclaimed £405 for a mis-sold payday loan thanks to MSE' Payday loans are a nightmare for many. They're hideously expensive and for years have been mis-sold by pushy firms such as Wonga, which has since gone bust largely due to an avalanche of customers' mis-selling claims. These firms often failed to make the necessary checks before approving a loan, making it too easy for vulnerable people to borrow. The huge costs meant borrowers sometimes paid back the loan many times over. So in Oct we launched our Payday Loan Mis-selling Tool & Guide to help you fight back - and it's already paying dividends. Here's Josie's story: "After reading your guide, I complained to QuickQuid about a 2013 loan and won. I've just received £405 and a promise the loan will be struck off my credit record. Thanks so much." Here's the key info: How to check if you've been mis-sold. Payday loan firms should examine your finances to ensure you can afford the loan and the big fees. If this wasn't done properly and you shouldn't have been lent the money, or if it didn't make the costs or the repayment timetable clear, you were mis-sold. See the full mis-selling checklist.What's the typical payout? It depends on your circumstances. Josie got £405 but we've heard of claims in the £1,000s. If mis-sold you usually get all fees and interest back, plus a further 8% interest on top - see payouts explained. How to claim - NEVER pay a claims company, our tool does it for FREE. Now people are having success - 60%+ of those who take their claim all the way to the Financial Ombudsman Service win - claims-company vultures are circling. Yet they often take £100s from any payout. Ignore 'em and use our new FREE Payday Loan Reclaiming Tool. It's been developed with complaints site Resolver, which we've been working with for 3yrs+. We've merged our template letters and experience with its technology. Enter your details and it helps draft, send and keep track of your complaint, and makes it easy to escalate to the ombudsman if necessary. Some common payday loan mis-selling questions. Lots more in our Payday Loan Reclaim Tool & Guide. - Can I claim if I've paid back my loan? Yes, though it usually needs to be less than 6yrs since you took it out. - Can I claim if my payday lender has gone bust (eg, Wonga)? The answer's not clear-cut - see gone bust help. - Will the record of a mis-sold loan and missed payments be taken off my credit file? Usually, but only if you ask for it. |
Track Santa as he delivers prezzies worldwide. Fun way to watch his progress on Christmas Eve. Track Santa £4,800 COUNCIL TAX REBAND VICTORY - SUCCESS OF THE WEEK: |
CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK Feeling the pressure of paying for Christmas? If you're worried about debt this festive season, help and support is available. Contact a free debt advice charity such as National Debtline, StepChange or Christians Against Poverty, or check out the MSE Forum to chat to other people working on their finances. And remember, no debt problem is unsolvable - there's always a way forward. |
THIS WEEK'S POLL What's your favourite Christmas film? As it's Christmas, for this week's poll we're forgetting money and going for a bit of fun. We've selected some festive films - which is your favourite? Two-thirds of you have switched energy provider this year. In last week's poll, we asked what you've switched in 2018. Encouragingly, 66% of MoneySavers switched energy supplier - suggesting our message about checking you're on the best tariff is getting across. On the flip-side though, roughly two-thirds of you stuck with your broadband provider all year, and just 23% gave their bank the boot. See full switching poll results. |
MONEY MORAL DILEMMA How can I get my friend to pay me back? A very close friend borrowed £100 (a large amount to me), promising to pay it back shortly. It's now been six months and they haven't, despite several reminders. I don't want to lose the friendship, but need the money. Enter the Money Moral Maze: How can I get my friend to pay me back? | Suggest an MMD | View past MMDs THE QUICKIES - Debt-Free Wannabe chat of the week: Debt-Free Roll of Honour |
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MSE TEAM APPEARANCES Wed 19 Dec - BBC Radio Cumbria, Money Talks with Ben Maeder, from 6pm, payday loan mis-selling |
QUESTION OF THE WEEK Q: I've got some spare cash and I'm looking for a safe place to save it. If I put it in a bank, what happens if it goes bust? Will I lose everything? Simon, by email. MSE Karl's A: Fortunately, there is protection. The Financial Services Compensation Scheme ensures deposits in current accounts and savings accounts of up to £85,000 per person, per financial institution are protected should a UK-regulated bank, building society or credit union go bust. For full help, see our Savings Safety guide. Please suggest a question of the week (we can't reply to individual emails). |
HAVE WE FOUND THE BEST CHRISTMAS SONG? That's all for this week, but before we go... last week on Twitter we held a knockout challenge to find your favourite Christmas song. From 8,500+ votes it came down to a final four of (drum roll please)... Fairytale of New York, All I Want For Christmas Is You, Do They Know It's Christmas? ('84 version) and Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree. Find out which won and let us know if you disagree in our 'Have we found the best Xmas song?' 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 marcus.co.uk, smarty.co.uk, santander.co.uk, moneysupermarket.com, confused.com, gocompare.com, comparethemarket.com, directline.com, aviva.co.uk, admiral.com, cahoot.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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