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DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
New. Top one-year 3.5% fixed savings + £55 cashback, or 1.86% if you need access Following another base rate rise in August, savings rates have continued to climb, and the top accounts pay the highest interest we've seen in more than a decade. However, with inflation above 10%, prices are rising faster than even the best savings grow, so in real terms savings are shrinking. It's therefore vital to maximise every penny of interest to minimise the shrinkage. We've today's top easy-access rates, and the top fixes for those who are able to lock money away for higher returns. Check your savings - if they pay under 1.86%, switch. The top easy-access account pays 1.86% AER variable interest. That's the bog-standard account, so if you're earning less than that, unless your money's locked away (or you've got more than £85,000 and want to spread it for safety), there's no excuse not to consider ditching and switching. Rates can change quickly - so do check the latest top savings and top cash ISAs, but here's a snapshot of the top easy-access and shorter fixes, correct at the time of sending this email...
And until Monday (5 Sep), Raisin newbies can apply via MSE to get an automatic £25 cashback. Use code MSE25 when you register, then open your chosen savings account and deposit £10,000+ by Friday 30 September. Plus, make sure you CLAIM Raisin's standard £30 cashback on top. See Raisin £55 bonus for full info on how it works. Yes, it's a bit of a faff. But the top one-year fix is only available through Raisin, as is the cashback - so doing it this way gives a significant boon. Or, if you're after an easy-access account, or a different fix, we've included other savings marketplace offers worth considering in our Top savings guide. Most don't need a cash ISA... but those with larger savings should consider them. The personal savings allowance (PSA) launched in 2016, allowing basic-rate taxpayers to earn £1,000/year of savings interest tax-free, and higher-rate taxpayers £500/year. At today's top easy-access rate, a basic-rate payer would need almost £54,000 of savings to generate that. If you've a lot less, just go for the account that pays the most - and those aren't cash ISAs. Yet if you've decent amounts of savings in cash, especially if you're fixing at a higher rate and you're likely to earn interest over your personal savings allowance, cash ISAs come into their own. Can you boost interest further? Some specialised options in our Savings section pay even more: - 50% bonus for many on universal credit or tax credits. See Help to Save. - 25% bonus for first-time buyers aged 18 to 39. See Top Lifetime ISAs. - Earn up to 5% on smaller amounts if you save monthly. See Regular savings. - Earn 5% on smaller savings. See Current account savings. - Prefer to invest? Higher returns, but more risk. See Stocks & Shares ISAs. |
Extra 20% off Amazon's 'hidden' Warehouse. This is the section of Amazon's site that resells returned items or products with minor defects at knockdown prices, and it's slicing a further 20% off in its end-of-summer sale. We've seen £109 GHDs for £65, and a £49 Tassimo coffee machine for £22 - check what you can find. Amazon Warehouse Grab FREE Lego worth £3 to £6. In The Entertainer toy stores this Saturday (3 Sep). Free Lego Ending. Get £20 cashback on top up-to 25-month 0% spending card. Apply by 9 Sep and this Barclaycard* (best to check acceptance odds first) gives accepted newbies £20 cashback if you spend £250+ on it within 90 days. So you can just use it for spending you'd do anyway, pay it off, and you're quids in at no cost. Yet it also offers up to 25 months at 0% on new spending too, so it's a good choice if you NEED to borrow - as done right, it's totally interest-free. Golden rules: 1) Pay at least the min monthly payment. 2) Clear the debt before the 0% ends or it's 22.9% rep APR. Full info in 0% spending cards. Grab £3 cinema tickets - this Saturday ONLY. It's National Cinema Day, so 100s of cinemas - including the big chains and some independents - are offering cheap tickets for all screenings. £3 cinema tickets FREE visits to 3,000+ historic buildings & heritage sites. Many that are normally closed, or normally charge, are open for free on selected days in Sep, including Shuttleworth and Chartwell. Heritage Open Days Urgent. Over state pension age and on a low income? Check if you can get a free £30 Iceland voucher. The grocery store is giving away 40,000 vouchers to struggling pensioners - though you need to live in certain parts of the UK, and they're likely to go quick. See who qualifies and how to apply. 72 flowering plug plants for £9 delivered. MSE Blagged. 4,800 bundles available, but it doesn't deliver to Northern Ireland or parts of Scotland. Thompson & Morgan |
Streaming savers - watch 100s of hours of TV & movies FREE Plus how to cut the cost of Disney+, Netflix, Prime and more A majority of households in the UK have at least one TV streaming service, but consumer analyst firm Kantar says that number's been falling this year as people cancel subscriptions - with many saying they did it to save money. Yet it's the streaming services that tend to have the most talked-about shows, such as House of Dragons and She Hulk. So we've tricks to help you watch what you want as cheaply as possible, whether you're new to streaming, or you've all the channels and want to cut back. Our TV MoneySaving tricks guide has full info, but here are a few tips to help... Streaming newbie? Watch over two months of top shows and movies for FREE. Some streaming services give free trials in the hope you'll be so blown away by their content you'll pay for it (or at least forget to cancel). For example, Amazon Prime Video gives 30 days, Apple TV and Paramount+ seven (though, sadly, nowt for Now, Netflix or Disney+). To max it, hop from free trial to free trial and you can watch up to 79 days' worth of Rings of Power, Ted Lasso, The First Lady and more - but always remember to cancel before you're charged if you don't want to keep it.Don't assume you must pay to watch - 100s of hours of box sets and movies are free on All 4, My5 and others. We've updated our list of 90+ popular box sets/movies you can stream for free - this includes Killing Eve, Luther, Pretty Little Liars, Dunkirk and A Star Is Born. If you do need to pay, do the streaming hokey cokey - you put one service in, take one service out... Subscribe to Netflix, Prime Video, Disney+ and Now Entertainment, and it's at least £33 a month. Yet it's easy to pay £5-£10 a month and still watch the top shows: pay for just one service, then when you've seen what you want, cancel it, move on to the next one, and do the same. We've full info on how to jump between 'em. MoneySaver Phil told us this saves him £100s: "I'll usually wait until there's something I want to see, subscribe for a month and binge what I want, then cancel. Saved about £180 in the last year compared to keeping them all." Got your eye on Disney+, Netflix or Prime Video? Save using our tips. They're popular, but you can still cut costs... - Disney+: 3 months for £8 in Clubcard vouchers, £10 cashback off an annual subscription, and more Disney+ deals. - Netflix: Go back to basics to save up to £108/year, plus 17 more Netflix hacks. - Amazon Prime Video: Video-only membership for £5.99/month, less than a full annual Prime membership. More ways to pay less for what you watch. These quick tips could save you even more... - Paying annually can help you save. If you'll want the service for a year, pay less by paying upfront. - Multiple watchers in one household or family? Check if you can (legally) share your streaming. - Only watch streaming services? See whether you still need to pay for a TV licence. PS: Our 2-minute MSE poll this week asks which paid-for services you subscribe to, and if you've cut back recently - please help us by filling it in. |
Can you cut your supermarket spend by £100s? Including hidden bargains, 25% cashback, and newbie grocery codes for up to £80 off. In case you missed it last week, see our 18 ways to take a bite out of food price hikes. Ends 11.59pm Thu. Last chance to grab 12GB Sim for just '£3.50/month'. Newbies to Lebara (uses Vodafone's network) can get a 12GB/month Sim with unlimited minutes and texts for just 1p/month for the first six months, then £6.90/month - equivalent to £3.46/month over a year. But it's a one-month contract, so you can cancel at any time. Plus, Lebara doesn't charge extra for using allowances in Europe. Need more/less data? Use our Cheap Mobile Finder. Student loan interest rates are rising on Thursday - but DON'T panic. Your new rate will be either 2.75%, 6.3% or 9%, depending on when/where you went to uni. Yet however high your interest is, this WON'T mean a change in your monthly repayments. See our full analysis of the rate rises and what they mean for you. Mega-cheap £1 Northern rail tickets - can you find 'em? Including Manchester to Blackpool. One million one-way advance fares for £1 (or 50p for kids), for travel from 6 Sep to 20 Oct. Northern rail sale 'I'm saving £1,470 on my TV & broadband thanks to MSE.' This week's success of the week comes from Alan, who used our Sky haggling tips and netted a massive saving. He said: "After reading your article on haggling, I thought I'd give it a go with my Sky TV, broadband and phone package. I contacted Sky and said I was leaving. The upshot was that by taking on a new contract for 18 months, I am set to save £1,470 and I changed nothing in my bundle. Happy viewing." Send us your MoneySaving successes on this or 'owt else. Two free Homebuilding & Renovating Show tickets (normally £14 each). London, 30 Sep to 2 Oct, plus tickets for Harrogate & Somerset shows later in the year. See Homebuilding & Renovating Show. Still chasing a refund for Covid-related travel disruption? Fill in our new survey. If bookings were cancelled due to lockdowns or other restrictions during the pandemic, let us know if you got your money back in our 5-minute travel survey. Are you an avid deals hunter? Want to help people in an energy crisis? Work for MSE... We're looking for a new Deals Researcher & Writer, Energy & Utilities Editorial Assistant, Senior Developer, and Team Assistant. MSE jobs |
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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THIS WEEK'S POLL How many paid-for streaming services do you subscribe to – and have you cut back? Recent research suggests more of us are cancelling subscriptions to video streaming services to save money. We've tips to cut costs above, but this week, we also want to know what paid-for services you subscribe to, and if you've cut back recently. The majority of MoneySavers spend between £41 to £100 on weekly groceries. Last week, we asked how much you spend on average each week on groceries. More than 11,000 people responded, with over half spending between £41 to £100. As you'd expect, those living with a partner and children are the most likely to spend more than £150 each week (12%), while less than 1% of those living by themselves also spend this much. See the full poll results. |
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MONEY MORAL DILEMMA What should I do with the lottery ticket I found in a charity shop coat? I bought a coat in a charity shop and, when I got it home, found a lottery ticket in one of the pockets. I checked the numbers and it's for a £5,000 win. But I'm not sure what to do now - should I return to the charity shop and ask if they know who donated the coat, give half the amount to the shop and keep half for myself as a way of sharing my good fortune, or keep it all as the coat and what it contains is now mine? Enter the Money Moral Maze: What should I do with the lottery ticket I found in a charity shop coat? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma |
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MSE TEAM APPEARANCES (SUBJECTS TBC) Thu 1 Sep - BBC Radio Leicester, Mid-morning with Aminata Kamara, from 11.35am |
POST-ITS, DISCOUNT CARDS & COPIOUS CUPS OF COFFEE... WHAT SHOULD NEW STUDENTS BRING TO UNI? That's all for this week, but before we go... with new students gearing up for the start of term, we unearthed a forum thread from a mature student asking what they needed to help them study. Popular recommendations included Post-its, earphones for private study time and memory sticks to back up work. A student discount card was also deemed vital, especially with the rising cost of living. And, of course, many suggested it'd be impossible to start any course of study without copious supplies of coffee... and wine. Discover more start-of-term tips in the What to bring to uni MSE Forum discussion. 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 tandem.co.uk, barclaycard.co.uk, 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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