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DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
Warning. Always get travel insurance... We're in the peak holiday booking month. Saturday just gone was likely the peak day. If you've just made your travel plans, don't forget an essential step - getting travel insurance NOW. This isn't just about being organised, Martin's ASAB rule is far more important than that... Martin: "Heartbreakingly, each year one or more people who've been diagnosed with cancer or other serious conditions usually ask me about their holiday, as they can no longer go and the airline/hotel won't give them a refund (as the ticket isn't faulty). I suggest they contact their travel insurer, as that's a key gap it's designed to cover, and then they say they haven't got around to getting it yet. It's a painful moment. Half the point of travel insurance is to protect you if things happen beforehand that stop you going, so delay and you're not getting all its value. Get it ASAB."
Travel insurance need-to-knows... Hitting the pistes? Get a winter sports add-on. All the providers above let you add winter sports cover, for both annual and single trip, usually for lost or damaged gear, piste closures, and medical costs from accidents. This crucially also includes public liability cover, in case you injure someone while on the slopes. Do be aware that if you go off-piste (or do any extreme sports), these WON'T cover you. More in winter sports info.If you've got an annual policy, when should you start it for? If it's a totally new policy, you need the start date to be the time you book the holiday (or as soon after as possible), otherwise if something happens before the start date you won't be covered. If you've already got annual cover, but your holiday dates are after the cover ends, get another policy to start as soon as the current one ends (most policies, including all the ones we list, will cover you if something happens while it's live that stops you going on a holiday booked after it ends - but there are a few that don't, so do check). Holidaying in Europe? Ensure you've an in-date European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) or Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC) - if not, apply for a free GHIC. This entitles you to treatment at state-run hospitals or GPs at the same cost as a local (so if it's free for them, it's free for you). See it as an addition to, not a substitute for, travel insurance. Many could save with a packaged bank account. These give good quality travel insurance, mobile phone cover and breakdown cover for a £15ish monthly fee - if you need all of them, you can save £100s. See top packaged bank accounts. What if my travel insurer unfairly turns my claim down? Knowing how firms will respond to claims is tough. You can always formally complain to the insurer and, if rejected, go to the free Financial Ombudsman to adjudicate. |
Pizza Express 2for1 for £1 and more restaurant codes. Restaurants are quieter in Jan, so chains including Toby Carvery, BrewDog, Harvester, Franco Manca and more have restaurant discounts to entice you. Energy Price Cap UP 1% and likely to rise again, yet you can lock in now for 7% less. On 1 Jan, the Energy Price Cap rose 1%, and a 2% rise is predicted in April. Currently you can fix for 12 months at 7% less than the Cap - use our whole-of-market Cheap Energy Club comparison to speedily find your winner. New. Top 5.01% easy-access savings + £10 cashback. A cash ISA's just a savings account you never pay tax on. And the current top rate beats the top normal easy-access savings, so for those who've not used this year's ISA allowance, Plum's 5.01% AER variable* is made up of 3.79% interest and a 1.22% newbies bonus paid after a year. You can put up to £20,000 in and it allows three annual penalty-free withdrawals - plus you can earn £10 cashback if you keep £100 in the account for first 90 days. Do note its complex structure. Saving £10,000+? You could get equivalent 6.6%. Savings marketplace Raisin* lets you save and move money via different banks after filling in just one form. Until 17 Jan, newbies who open it using code SAVINGS100 get £100 cashback after 6mths, if you hold a min £10,000 in a qualifying account. That includes Paragon Bank's 4.55% easy access (on £10,000 with the £100 boost, that'd be an effective 6.6% rate over 6mths) and some fixes that pay even more. More options: Including top fixes in Top savings and Top cash ISAs. British Airways customers 'hugely disappointed' by loyalty scheme revamp. From 1 April, only those spending £1,000s a year will earn status perks. See BA Executive Club news. New. Sub-6% personal loan - cheapest rate seen since early 2024. There are two new cheapest loans for £7,500 to £25,000. Novuna's 6% rep APR (1 to 5yrs), which you can access via our Loans Eligibility Calc (Novuna has requested we don't link direct) and, from 12.01am tomorrow (Wed), it'll be joined there by TSB at 5.9% (TSB's also requested you go via our eligibility calc as its credit scoring is tight). Full best buys in cheap personal loans. Golden rule: Never borrow willy-nilly. Only for a planned, NEEDED one-off, where you've budgeted that you can afford the repayments. Borrow as little as you can, and repay as quickly as you can. If in doubt, don't. Ends Thu. £70 Eurostar returns (plus get extra 5% off). For travel from 14 Jan to 3 Apr. Your(o) star deal Buyers beware... eBay's charging new fees. You'll soon pay up to 4% AND 75p/item when buying from private sellers. See new eBay fees. Ends 11.59pm Fri. Travelled with South West Trains in 2015 to 2017? Quickly check if you're due £30+. It's paying up to £25m in compensation for alleged historic overcharging, but go quick. Check & claim Money, marriage & divorce: What are the financial benefits of marriage? | Are pre-nups worth it? | How to divorce cheaply | Splitting pensions, mortgages & more. With new data out this week showing one in five couples who want to separate are locked together due to money worries, a reminder of October's Not The Martin Lewis Podcast - where Martin asked specialists key marriage & divorce questions. Listen via BBC Sounds | Apple | Spotify or elsewhere podcasts are listed. And as it's such an important topic, we put a transcript right here on MSE. |
New. 370,000 people on minimum wage were UNDERPAID in 2024 Big names such as Easyjet, Greggs & Moss Bros have got it wrong. Spread word New 2024 figures from the Low Pay Commission show that 370,000 people on minimum wage were paid less than they should've been. With the minimum wage set to jump in April, it's even more important all those on lower incomes don't just assume their employers are following the rules - even big names get it wrong. For example, in Feb 2024, Easyjet, Greggs, Moss Bros and Estée Lauder were among those included in the Govt's list of 500 firms named for underpaying min wage, though some of the reasons were complex - a new list's due soon. So it's worth checking...
If any of this possibly rings true, jump to our Are you being paid enough? guide for a full explanation. How to complain if you think you're being or have been underpaid. You've a legal right to be paid more and to back pay going back a maximum of six years. Of course, some people are scared to complain and don't want to rock the boat. You cannot lose your job for raising this. If you're unsure, you can call the ACAS helpline to talk through your options. Our how to claim back underpaid minimum wage takes you through it, but as a brief idea... Happy to raise it with your employer? For bigger employers, this should be easier as it's less personal, especially if it's a one-off mistake. If you're in a union, you can speak to it about this and get it to represent you. If it isn't resolved with an informal chat, you can submit a formal complaint in writing. If the firm doesn't reply, or you're unhappy with the outcome, you can fill in this ACAS complaint form or call 0300 123 1122.Prefer to complain anonymously (or it's about a former employer)? You can sort it anonymously via HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) by submitting a form, then you needn't be involved directly. (Tip: Make sure you tick 'yes' when asked if you're willing to be contacted by HMRC - it told us it's really difficult to investigate if you don't.) Of course, if you're at a very small firm and are the only employee, they'll work out that it's you - there's very little way round that sadly, yet these are your legal rights. PS: The real living wage is different. Each year, a panel of professionals for the Living Wage Foundation calculate the minimum workers aged 18 or over should be paid for a basic standard of living. Until Oct 2025, it's set at £12.60/hr (£13.85/hr in London). 15,000+ businesses have volunteered to sign up to the scheme, so all their employees aged 18 or over must earn at least this. Martin's a big supporter - see his vid on why employers should sign up. |
Ends Thu. Up to 50% off Great Western Railway. For 9 Jan to 13 Apr travel, 150,000 tix available. Track 'em down The Sun '£9.50' holidays are back... but are they really £9.50? Rarely, but savings are still possible. Sun hols Rush hair salon 35% off haircut, 1,000 codes. MSE Blagged. For a cut & finish. Cut to the chase 5.4m people haven't filed their 2023/24 tax return yet. Do it ASAP or risk a £100 fine & 7.25% interest. If you've been told to file a self-assessment tax return (or you were self-employed, earnt £150,000+, earnt £50k+ and get Child Benefit, or have £10k+ in savings interest), the deadline's 31 Jan. Full help in tax return deadline. FREE National Running Show tix (norm £18). At the NEC Birmingham, 25 & 26 Jan. 5,000 available. Jog on How do you rate your mobile's network? We want to know how each provider rates for service (how it treats you) and coverage (how strong the signal is when you need it). Please vote in this week's poll. Want an MSE Charity grant? Funding's available soon. Know of a non-profit group that could benefit from a cash boost? Our charity's launching its winter funding round next Mon (13 Jan), offering grants of up to £10,000 to organisations that help people to improve their money skills. Check whether your group qualifies and see how to apply. |
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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Ends in a week: Top triple reward credit card deal While this is about a credit card, it ISN'T ABOUT DEBT, it's about using it to earn yourself free money and rewards. Credit cards want you to spend on them, so much so that some pay you to do it. Yet there's a way to neuter their ability to charge interest. Set up a Direct Debit to repay the card IN FULL each month and then you can reap the profit and not pay a penny in interest (just don't withdraw cash on it, bust your credit limit or see it as an excuse to overspend). Right now one of the best payers is about to end - it's perfect for those who are debt-free and have a reasonable income. Amex Gold: Free £165 shopping + Deliveroo cashback + airport lounge passes. The American Express Preferred Rewards Gold credit card (link goes via eligibility, so you can see if you'll be accepted) temporary sign-up points boost ends next Tue (14 Jan). So apply before, and as long as you haven't had an Amex card in the last two years, if you're accepted you get...1) Bonus points worth £165 at Amazon, M&S or Sainsbury's if you spend £3,000 on it within 3mths. Spend a total of £3,000+ over the first three months (so £1,000 a month of family spending) and you can currently get 30,000 bonus points (normally it's 20,000) on top of the standard one point per pound spent. So hit the trigger and you'll have at least 33,000 points, enough to be exchanged for... - £165 in Amazon, M&S and Currys vouchers, or £165 worth of Sainsbury's Nectar points. - OR airline points, eg, 33,000 Avios (for BA or Qatar), 33,000 Virgin points, 33,000 Etihad Guest miles, or 24,750 Emirates Skywards miles. - OR hotels points, such as 66,000 Hilton Honours points, 49,500 Marriott points or 99,000 Radisson points. 2) Two £5 Deliveroo cashbacks a month (worth up to £120/yr). Save the offer to your card (found under 'offers' in the Amex app or online banking) and use the card to pay for Deliveroo (min spend £5), and you'll automatically get £5 credit on two orders a month. 3) Four free airport lounge passes a year (worth around £50 each). These should come within six weeks of acceptance and they're usable in many airport lounges worldwide. WARNING. The card is fee-free in year one, but £195/yr after. So diarise to cancel before year two if you don't want to pay the £195. Plus if you don't repay IN FULL each month, it charges a horrific 30.7% APR on purchases. Make sure you've a Direct Debit in place to pay in full to ensure that never happens. Pay off IN FULL, means IN FULL, not nearly in full. The words IN FULL are Martin's catchphrase for a reason. If you spend £1,000 in a month and clear the card entirely, there's no interest. Spend £1,000 and pay off £999, and you usually pay interest on the whole £1,000, not just the £1 left. |
THIS WEEK'S POLL How do you rate your mobile network's service and coverage? We want to find out how each provider rates for service (how it treats you) and coverage (how strong the signal is when you need it). In truth, there are only four main networks providing signals - the rest use these, but under their own brands (see our mobile networks guide for who piggybacks on who). Please rate the firm that sends your mobile phone bill. Vote in this week's poll. MoneySavers' favourite selection choc is a Maltesers Teaser. Last week, we asked for your favourite chocolate selection box and favourite individual chocolate. After nearly 13,000 votes, Quality Street is the selection box most likely to contain a MoneySaver's favourite chocolate (28%). But it's actually the Celebrations box which contains the most popular individual chocolate - the Maltesers Teaser (11% of all votes). See full poll results. |
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MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Should I pay half the Stamp Duty on the house I'm buying with my boyfriend? I'm buying a house with my boyfriend, which will be the first property I own. But I won't get first-time buyers' relief on the Stamp Duty, as my boyfriend already owns a property, so we'll have to pay an extra £5,000 in tax. Should I pay half of it, as half of the house we're buying will be mine, or should he pay the whole cost, as his circumstances are the reason we have to pay it? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should I pay Stamp Duty on the house we're buying? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs |
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MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (TUE 7 JAN ONWARDS) Thu 9 Jan - Ask Martin Lewis, BBC Radio 5 Live, 1pm |
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