Plus... 3x free £100+ bank switches, 'I reclaimed £9,300 payday loans', Holland & Barrett 25% off
                                                           

MoneySavingExpert

14 July 2021 | View in browser
MoneySavingExpert
Weekly Money Tips         
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THE TOP TIPS IN THIS EMAIL

Are summer hols abroad back? 18 need-to-knows, incl cheap deals, PCR tests, euros etc
Free £25 or free £37.50 Sainsbury's spend via top 0% credit cards
Are you owed £1,000s from banks, lenders, Govt and more?
New. Saga joins Marcus with 0.5% easy-access savings
B&Q £5 off £30 spend
It's on. £119 of Boots No7 for £32
Get up to £125 FREE CASH to switch bank - which to choose?
Martin's universal credit tip on savings rejections
Why is HSBC really paying likely 100,000s of people £100s?
Martin: 'Had a problem with money and mental health?'
The Sun '£9.50' holidays are back... but are they really £9.50?
Holland & Barrett 25% off code
Ikea summer sale ending
Reminder - have you renewed your tax credits?
This week's best buys, incl '£13.99/mth' b'band, 2.8% loans, 29mths 0% debt shift
Should we help pay for the fence our neighbours put up without asking?
 

BEST BUYS & TOOLS

Cheap Energy Club, incl Pick Me A Tariff
MSE Cheap Mobile Finder
Credit Club incl free credit report
0% Balance Transfers
Compare Broadband deals
Cheap Car Insurance
Best Bank Accounts
Top Savings Accounts
Credit Cards for Bad Credit
Credit Card Eligibility Calculator
Loans Eligibility Calculator
Mortgage Comparison
Free online complaints tool - Resolver
Compare Travel Money
Best Sim Only Deals

 
 

Are summer holidays abroad back on?
18 need-to-knows whether you've booked or want to, incl cheap deals, PCR tests, cheap euros, insurance and more

 

In the last week, big changes to travel rules from England and Scotland have been announced. From next Monday (19 July), those who are fully vaccinated or under 18 won't need to quarantine on return from 'amber' destinations, and in England the advice not to travel to amber zones will be dropped, though Scotland still cautions against this. That will mean many people can travel to the most traditional holiday destinations.

This seems to have changed travel appetites - of 25,000 votes in Martin's Twitter poll done just after the announcement, 20% of voters who hadn't planned to go away are looking to now. Yet the traffic light system is just the start of the story.

Step One: Where can you go and what tests will you need?

The change of rules is so far only for England and Scotland, and that's what we'll focus on below - but there's a strong chance the other UK nations will soon follow suit. Full updates in our Coronavirus Travel guide.

MoneySavingExpert's coronavirus travel guide explains how the traffic light system for returning to the UK works1. The traffic light system in a nutshell.  It dictates whether you need to quarantine on your return and what tests you need on your return - see the full list of traffic light destinations. Here's how it impacts quarantine, with help on testing further below.

- 27 green destinations: Includes Majorca, Ibiza, Israel, Gibraltar and Malta - no need for anyone to self-isolate on return.

- 140+ amber destinations: Includes much of Europe - France, Spain, Greece, Italy etc - and the USA. Currently, if you return from one of these you face up to 10 days' self-isolation. From 19 July, that continues for those who aren't fully vaccinated, but if you've had both jabs or are under 18, you won't need to self-isolate on return.

- 56 red destinations: Includes Turkey, Dubai, Egypt, South Africa and India. Come back from one of those places and it is a 10-day hotel quarantine on return (£1,750 for a solo traveller - hardship reductions are available), basically making them a no-go.

The next review of countries' colours is due tomorrow (Thu). It's also worth separately checking the Foreign Office country advice, which is about safety when away.

2. Yet the other big question is, will the country let you in? This is the other half - and where it gets tricky. For example, green list Malta will let under-12s and those double-vaccinated in, but that means if you've 12 to 17-year-olds, who the UK doesn't vaccinate, they can't go.

See our list of the big holiday destinations' entry requirements, including Spain, the USA, Italy, France, Portugal and far more, plus their test requirements too.

It's also worth thinking about what your holiday will be like. Are there curfews in place, as there are in some parts of Spain? There's a lot to check, sadly.

3. You'll need a private PCR test when returning from ALL trips abroad - we've researched how you can cut the cost. You can't use the Govt/NHS 'Test and Trace' system for the tests, you'll need a private firm.

Test prices can vary hugely, from £40-ish to £200+. Our cheap Covid PCR and lateral flow tests guide takes you through the options. So factor those costs into your holiday budget. This only applies to England and NI, though - elsewhere in the UK tests must be via official providers, which can mean they're costlier. Here are the rules of what you'll need (UK-wide):

Green amber red
Before departing UK
 
No test needed to leave, but the country you visit may require a test - some also test on arrival
 
Up to 3 days pre-return to UK
 
Test needed (lateral flow or PCR)
 
2 days after return to UK
 
PCR test needed (and will still be even for those double-vaccinated returning from 19 July)
 
8 days after return to UK
 
No test
 
PCR test needed now.

From 19 July in Eng and Scot: Those fully vaccinated or under 18 won't need this PCR
PCR test needed

Also note if you arrive in England from an amber country and need to self-isolate, you can end it early by taking an extra test on day five (though you still need the day eight test).

4. Brace yourself for up to 4hr airport queues on your return. With border staff now needing to check Covid documents as well as passports - and staff shortages due to Test and Trace pings - the Govt's warned of "lengthy" waits. Be prepared.

Step Two: Not booked? How to find cheap, protected holidays

Travel firms have reported resurgent interest since last week's announcement, with Skyscanner saying it had an immediate 53% traffic spike and Easyjet a fourfold bookings increase to amber list destinations.

Usually that'd create price hikes, but firms are also putting on extra capacity to meet demand - for example, Virgin Atlantic is increasing flight capacity to some destinations by 300%. So there should still be bargains.

MoneySavingExpert's guide to cheap package holidays5. Package holidays give extra protection and can be cheap, eg, Majorca flights + 4nts in a 4* hotel in Aug from £141 pp. If you're heading to a big resort, then package holidays - flights, hotels etc in one booking - can often be cheapest, and they also offer some handy extra protection right now.

Under the Package Travel Regulations, you're legally due a refund if the travel agent / firm or an airline / hotel / car firm etc goes bust or because your destination has closed its borders to Brits. For more info plus how to find the top deals, see Cheap Package Holidays.

6. Many airlines now offer free date changes, and deals abound, eg, London to Majorca rtn for £30 in early Aug. Our full How to bag cheap flights guide takes you through ways to get cheap deals, and right now there are bargains as airlines compete to fill planes.

You've a legal right to a full refund if the flight's cancelled - yet don't assume they will be cancelled even if people are effectively banned from travel (eg, if a destination turns red). Instead focus on the flexibility you're offered if YOU choose to change too.

Easyjet and BA let you make changes for free, nearly up to the last minute (though you'll pay the difference if it's to a more expensive flight). See airline-by-airline cancellation policies.

7. Don't just book a hotel on the first site you see. The same room is often sold at vastly different costs. There's huge variation in what you pay depending on how you book - our Cheap Hotels guide will take you through it (and similar in Cheap Self-Catering Accommodation).

Do look for bookings where you only pay on arrival, and can cancel for free (often you can do so 24 to 48 hours before your stay starts).

8. Always pay by plastic. Even if you've some flexible booking protection, remember that'll be worthless if the firm goes bust, and travel companies are sadly under threat.

- Paying via credit card gives strongest protection: Section 75 refund rules mean the card provider is jointly liable for items costing £100+. So using a credit card (repaid IN FULL  of course, so there's no interest) is best practice, usually protecting you if the firm goes bust - though often not for bookings via travel agents.

- All debit and credit cards also get lesser chargeback protection. The chargeback refund rules mean if you don't get what you pay for you can usually get a refund, so they are useful for debit cards and where Section 75 doesn't work.

Step Three: Once booked... tricks to slash holiday costs

And breathe. Now we're back to our familiar summer MoneySaving territory, with the key info to cut costs once you've booked. In normal years, this is where we'd start our travel tips - but hey, who knows what 'normal' is any more...

9. Travel insurance is still vital - get it ASAB, it can be as little as £9 a week. While travel insurance doesn't cover all Covid eventualities, all the normal reasons to get it still apply, especially if you're ill while away. Always get it ASAB - As Soon As you Book - as half its point is to protect you from unexpected eventualities before you go.

Of course, everyone is asking: "Are you covered for Covid cancellations?" The usual answer, in a nutshell... yes if it's personal, no if it's due to lockdown. Here's a little more detail:

- You/family can't travel as you've got Covid? Usually covered.
- You/family can't travel after Test and Trace ping? Some policies cover this.
- You/family catches Covid abroad? Some policies cover treatment and costs if you can't return.
- You won't go as you'd need to quarantine on return? NO policies cover this.
- Can't travel due to lockdown or change of rules? Hardly any policies cover this.
- Can't travel as you don't feel safe going - even with no advisory against going? NO policies cover this.

Yet DON'T LET THIS STOP YOU GETTING COVER given the multitude of risks that insurance covers you for. 

We explain full options in our Cheap Travel Insurance guide, but as a quick reference, here are our top no-frills picks (ie, those that meet our minimum cover levels - though we can't vouch for their service). We give a few as the winner depends on your age and destination:

- Annual policies: These cover virtually all trips in a year (incl booked UK accommodation), and are best if you go away 2+ times a year. Try Coverwise (Bronze)*, Leisure Guard* and Axa (Silver). Prices range from £13 for young singles to about £70 for a family worldwide.

- Single trips: Leisure Guard*, Coverwise (Bronze)* and CoverForYou (Bronze)* tend to be cheapest - from £9 a week for an individual in Europe.

- Over 65 or had a past medical issue? Check our Over-65s' Travel Insurance or Pre-Existing Conditions Travel Insurance guides.

- Foreign Office warning against travel to your destination? See specialist cover.

Do note, if you get insurance and your claim is unfairly rejected, you can take the provider to the free Financial Ombudsman.

MoneySavingExpert's guide to the top travel credit cards10. Slash the cost of euros, dollars or dong - the cheapest way to spend abroad is on the right plastic. Sort it now. The easiest and cheapest way to spend abroad is on the top specialist travel cards.

Normally, spend on plastic abroad and the banks give near-perfect rates but then add a 'non-sterling exchange rate fee' of roughly 3% - so £100 worth of euros costs you £103. But there are some credit and debit cards that don't charge this so you get the same near-perfect rates the banks do, smashing bureaux de change. Of course, with a credit card, only get one if you'll repay IN FULL each month to avoid interest.

- Top-pick credit card: Barclaycard Rewards* (best to check eligibility chances first) is one of those specialist cards that doesn't add to the exchange rate.

It's top pick for three added features: i) It doesn't charge a cash withdrawal fee abroad. ii) Even if you repay in full, most cards charge interest on cash withdrawals - this one doesn't on non-sterling withdrawals. iii) It gives 0.25% cashback on all spending worldwide. Fail to repay in full though and it is 22.9% rep APR interest.

- Top-pick debit card: Starling Bank* has no overseas fees on spending and withdrawals (max £300/day cash) on its debit card. And while here you are opening a new bank account, there's no hard credit check if you don't apply for an overdraft, so it's a decent option if you're not sure you'll be accepted and don't want to risk damaging your credit score. You don't have to switch to its account to get it - it can be used as a secondary account. 

- Best travel cash: If you can't get a top credit or debit card, or prefer cash, our travel money comparison tool compares 14+ bureaux to show the best rates. This is fewer providers than usual, as many travel money services are paused - we'll add them back when they resume.

11. There are still no roaming charges for most in Europe but beware elsewhere. In most cases you can still roam like at home within Europe this summer, though if you're going outside the EU, it's a different story. For full help on how to avoid eye-watering charges of up to £7/MB - which can add up to £100s - see Cheap Mobile and Data Roaming.

However, EE has broken ranks and will start charging some to roam in Europe from January. 

12. Pay less for airport parking by booking early - but look for flexibility. The easiest way is to use our discounted links for airport parking comparison sites, incl SkyParkSecure* (5-35% off),  Looking4Parking* (5-35% off), Holiday Extras* (10-26% off) and  FHR* (5-20% off).

However, while it's usually cheapest to book ahead, right now it's also crucial you can cancel or move your booking if needed. For full help, see our Cheap Airport Parking guide.

13. Hiring a car? Booking early saves you - plus know your car hire insurance rights for when they try to force you to upgrade. Even though it's getting late for this summer, it's still cheaper to book now than leave it until you're there. Our Cheap Car Hire  guide takes you through it, and shows how to get cheap standalone excess insurance at nearly a tenth of what the firms charge. Many firms now offer free cancellation too, making it easier. 

14. Check if you've a valid GHIC or EHIC - more than 6m cards expire this year. If you plan to travel to the EU, these cards give you access to state-run hospitals or GPs at the same price as a local. So if it's free for them, it's free for you. That's important right now.

If you have a European Health Insurance Card (EHIC), check it is still valid. If not, or if you don't have one, since Brexit it's been replaced for new applicants by the Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC) and you can get a GHIC for FREE . If any site tries to charge for one, it's a scam.

15. The passport rules may have changed since you last went overseas - does yours have at least 6mths left? Since Brexit, many EU countries have joined those requiring you to have at least 6mths of passport validity left (in some cases more) to be allowed in. So check yours now, as the Passport Office has warned of possible application backlogs. See Passport Rules and Renewals.

16. Turn old sun cream bottles around to save cash. For why, see our sun cream saving tips. And if you do need a new bottle, it's possible to get 5-star UVA protection from as little as £2.29.

17. Learn to talk like a local for free. Don't be a classic 'Brit abroad' - we've clever apps to help you learn the lingo before you go, and to translate 59 languages offline when you're there. Free language apps

18. Driving your vehicle to Europe this summer? You still need an insurance 'green card' for now. This is an international certificate of insurance issued by your insurer in the UK, confirming that you have the necessary minimum cover. The European Commission has just announced it'll soon scrap the green card requirement but we don't yet know when that change is coming in, so for the time being you'll need one. More details are in our Driving in Europe guide.

For lots more help and info, see our 65+ Overseas Travel Tips.

 
 
 

DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads
Lots of scam ads litter social media and even newspaper websites - some of these lie that we or Martin promote Bitcoin, binary trading etc. See Fake ads warning.

 

 
 

TWO top credit cards which each have TWO powerful perks...
1. Grab a FREE £25 cash or FREE £37.50 at Sainsbury's
2. Then if needed, they're TOP 0% spending cards too: up to 21mths 0%

There's been a dearth of decent credit card deals over the last year. However right now there are two hot offers, and while they're all about encouraging you to spend, they can be manipulated both to grab a freebie AND cut the cost of any needed borrowing.

  • £25 cashback with M&S Bank and £37.50-worth of Nectar points with Sainsbury's Bank are among the top picks in MoneySavingExpert's Best 0% Credit Cards guideStep 1. Grab a freebie. There are now two cards available that offer freebies to accepted new customers, and have a market-leading 0% deal (or close to it)...

    a) M&S Bank* (always best to check your acceptance odds first ) offers £25 cashback to newbies who spend £100 on it within the first 90 days (it's then paid into your account within two months). Plus you also get one reward point (worth 1p in M&S vouchers) per £1 of spending in M&S or per £5 of spending elsewhere.

    b) Sainsbury's Bank* (again, it's best to check acceptance odds first ) offers new cardholders 750 Nectar points (worth £3.75) for each £35+ spent at Sainsbury's in the first 2mths, up to a max 7,500 pts (£37.50) - if they've had a Nectar card for at least six months. If you do bigger shops, eg, £120, split it to max the gain, eg, £35, £35 and £50. You also get the normal two pts (worth 1p) per £1 spent at Sainsbury's and one (worth 0.5p) per £5 elsewhere.

    With both cards, just do your normal spending on it. It's not an excuse to spend more. Then pay the card off IN FULL each month, and you've grabbed the freebie. Or...
     
  • Step 2. Both cards are TOP 0% spending deals, so if you need to borrow, it doesn't get cheaper than this. Done right, there's no cost at all, as with these cards you can have up to 21mths at no interest.

    Yet even though it's free, only borrow if you NEED to. That means for a planned, affordable purchase (eg, replacing a faulty fridge) - not to fill in gaps in your income. If in doubt, don't borrow.

    The Sainsbury's Bank* card is 'up to' 21mths at 0% (again, check acceptance odds first ) making it the joint-longest on the market - though the 'up to' means some poorer credit scores may only be offered 13mths 0%. The M&S Bank* card is 20mths at 0% ( check acceptance odds), and is the longest 0% card that gives all accepted customers a DEFINITE 0% period. There are other options of similar lengths, but they don't give rewards. Full info in 0% Spending (and see APR Examples). If you do use the cards for borrowing, obey the golden rules...

    a) Pay at least the monthly min and stick within your credit limit, or you can lose the 0% and get hit with fees.
    b) Plan to clear the card (or balance-transfer) before the 0% ends or the interest rate will jump - M&S to 21.9% rep APR, Sainsbury's to 20.9% rep APR.
    c) Don't use these cards to withdraw cash - it's not at 0%.

  • Will applying for these cards hit my creditworthiness? A full application leaves a mark on your credit file, even if rejected (hence why we say use our eligibility calc first to see if you'll likely be accepted). Lots of applications in a short space of time can have a small, negative impact for a few months. Yet for most with decent credit histories, you could apply to one card - or even both - and it shouldn't be a problem. However, it's best avoided if you have an important credit application (eg, a mortgage) due imminently.

 

New. Saga joins Marcus with 0.5% easy-access savings. Saga* and sister brand Marcus* (backed by Goldman Sachs) both now offer a market-leading 0.5% AER variable interest - full info in Top Savings. Existing Marcus / Saga customer? A quirk means many can increase their interest rate with just a few clicks.

B&Q £5 off £30 spend. For newbies to its free loyalty scheme. See how to get £5 off at B&Q.

It's on! £119 of Boots No7 beauty & skincare for £32 - not likely to last long. The 10-piece set including mascara, eye pencil, cleanser etc we mentioned last week is now available - but it'll likely go quickly. No7 beauty

Get up to £125 FREE CASH for switching bank, but which to choose? Changes to who offers what mean it's now a much more finely balanced choice. In brief... Biggest free cash (£125):  HSBC Advance* easily wins this (you must be a newbie). Big free cash (£100) & top service:  First Direct* newbies get less but it scored 91% 'great' on service in our most recent poll, and most get a £250 0% overdraft. Free £150 experience day: The highest face-value reward, but less flexible.  Virgin Money* newbies can get £150 towards a hot-air balloon ride, sushi classes, track days etc plus 2.02% interest on up to £1,000, and a top debit card for spending abroad. Full info incl who can get 'em:  Best Bank Accounts.

Martin's universal credit tip: 'Have you been rejected, or had your award reduced due to savings? If you've since used them up, reapply.'  Over to Martin: "If you're eligible for UC, but you or your partner has £6,000+ in savings, your award's reduced. By £16,000+ you get nowt. This has impacted many during the pandemic, so they've used their savings. If so, the Govt has confirmed to us you can reapply/ask to be reassessed, based on the new lower savings amount. I've asked the team to write up how you do it - see  universal credit savings help." 

Why is HSBC really paying likely 100,000s of people £100s in refunds and compensation? Could it owe more? After former and current HSBC, First Direct, John Lewis Finance and M&S Bank customers received payments out of the blue, we've been  questioning HSBC on what it's really about.

 
 

BLAGGED FOR MSE

- Holland & Barrett 25% off & free delivery code Ends Sun

DID YOU MISS?

- Govt reveals full details of 5th Covid self-employment grant
- Nectar boost if you connect payment plastic to your account
- Grab £100 off groceries by combining delivery offers
- Check out Amazon's hidden warehouse of discounted returns
- 5,000+ mags & newspapers for free via app, eg, OK

 
 

Are you owed £1,000s from banks, lenders, Govt and more?
'Thanks to you, I've reclaimed £9,300 from 72 payday loans'

Our uplifting success of the week is from MoneySaver Emma - from desperate debts to savings in just a year

Reclaim, reclaim, reclaim. Across a range of industries, customers have been misinformed, mis-sold, mistreated and are due big money back, and you NEEDN'T PAY ANYONE to do it. This week's success, below, is from Emma via our Reclaim payday loans for free guide, but that's far from the only reclaim to look at. Here are five of the big ones...

- Ever paid a fee for your bank account? Many can reclaim £1,000s. Use our FREE packaged bank account reclaim tool.
- Reclaim guarantor loans. Many were mis-sold - check if you're one of them. See the guarantor loans lowdown.
- Reclaimed PPI? Reclaim your tax too. You could be due £100s back on top - see Reclaim PPI tax.
- Had hefty charges for busting your overdraft in the past? In a few cases you can still reclaim bank charges.
- Are you in the wrong council tax band? You may be due £1,000s back - see Council tax check & challenge.

And that's just the tip of the iceberg - see our full reclaim section for many more. Here's why it's worth checking...

To: [email protected]
Sent: 02 July 2021 11:55
Subject: Debt free at last

Dear MSE, 

I just wanted to send a quick email to thank you for all of the information and advice you provide.

After being in serious and persistent debt for over 10 years, I disclosed my debt to my partner last year and together we have worked through them using your help. [See our Debt Help guide if you're in a similar boat - MSE]

Following your reclaim payday loans tips, we challenged the affordability and suitability of my loans and we have won most of the complaints (61 out of 72 payday loans in total) either directly through the companies or via the Financial Ombudsman. Altogether, I've received interest repayments and compensation totalling over £9,300. I've also separately received compensation and refunds for credit card charges and overdraft fees totalling around £800 (so far).

We also contacted all catalogue/store cards and credit cards, agreeing interest-free payments and reduced payment plans after completing a budget. We used your "avalanche method ". I restricted all spending, and directed all spare/available money at the most expensive debts and those with the shortest agreements first. I then transferred attention to the next, and so on until all debts were cleared.

In short, I've gone from having over £20,000-worth of debt to being debt-free and saving in less than a year thanks to your advice and the help of my partner.

Best wishes,

Emma

 

Martin: 'Had a problem with money & mental health?' Over to Martin: "In 2016, I set up the Money & Mental Health Policy Institute (MMHPI) charity to come up with policy to break the marriage made in hell that is money and mental health problems. If you've experienced these issues I'd love you to join the MMHPI research panel to have your say. The team there work wonders, eg, getting Govt to stop the debt threat letters, making firms more accessible to those with mental health issues, and a host more. As I'm still the charity's chair and funder, I've blogged what we do in my new MMHPI annual update."

The Sun '£9.50' holidays are back... but are they really ever £9.50? They're cheap, but in reality, they never cost just £9.50. Sep-Nov bookings. See our analysis and info on  Sun holidays.

Holland & Barrett 25% off most items code, works with existing discounts - eg, £6.70 for 120 multivitamins (norm £12). MSE Blagged.  Also gets free delivery. Holland & Barrett

Ikea summer sale (up to 50% off) ends Sun. Plus 17 more Ikea hacks. Eg, get spare parts free and trade in old Ikea furniture for vouchers. Check out  Ikea MoneySavers.

Reminder - have you renewed your tax credits? More than 2.5m letters have been sent out - most will have had theirs for a while but there are now only two weeks left until the Sat 31 Jul deadline to get it sorted. Of all tax credit recipients, 800,000 MUST respond to their letter or payments could stop. You could also lose out if your info's wrong, so check and TELL 'EM if it's not right. See tax credit help.

 
 

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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS

0% balance transfers

Longest 0%: M&S Bank (check eligibility / apply* ) 29mths 0%, 2.75% fee (min £5) + £25 cashback if shifting £100+ in first 90 days (21.9% rep APR interest after)
No-fee 0%: Santander (check eligibility / apply*) 18mths 0% (20.9% rep APR)

Top energy deals

Cheapest top-service deal: Green variable, save £177/yr
Cheapest good-service fix: Utility Point 12mth fix, save £113/yr
Want us to help you pick a tariff and switch you yearly? Try MSE Pick Me A Tariff Every Year

Assumes typical use vs current price cap (but it's predicted to rise £100+/yr in Oct). Links go via Cheap Energy Club.

Top savings accounts

Top standard easy access: Marcus 0.5%, min £1 deposit
Top one-year fix: Kent Reliance 1.01%, min £1,000

Car insurance

Get comparison site quotes in this order:

  1. MoneySupermarket*
  2. Compare The Market*
  3. Confused.com*
  4. Gocompare*
Cheap loans

Cheapest for £5k-£7.5k: Ratesetter (check eligibility / apply*) (2.8% rep APR interest)
Cheapest for £7.5k-£15k: Cahoot (check eligibility / apply*), Ratesetter ( check eligibility / apply*) or MBNA ( check eligibility / apply*) (all 2.8% rep APR)

Broadband top picks

Standard (10Mb+): Plusnet, equiv £13.99/mth
Fibre (30Mb+): Plusnet, equiv £19.11/mth
Superfast fibre (55Mb+): TalkTalk, equiv £19.45/mth

Best bank accounts

Free £125 + 1% regular saver: HSBC Advance
Free £100 + GREAT service: First Direct

Cheap Sims

Up to 3GB data: Lebara, equiv £4.38/mth for 3GB, unltd mins & txts
4GB-9GB data: Plusnet, equiv £4.92/mth for 4GB, unltd mins & txts
10GB+ data: Three, equiv £6.67/mth for 12GB, unltd mins & txts

 

CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK

Can you spare three hours to help get food to vulnerable children and families? In 2020, charity FareShare ran its regular food collection drive in Tesco stores, but because the pandemic meant it couldn't recruit volunteers to help, donations were down by more than half. This year, volunteers are allowed again, so from Thu 15 Jul to Sat 17 Jul in large Tesco stores across the UK, you can volunteer to help by encouraging shoppers to add a few long-life items to their trolleys that they can then donate to food charity Fareshare. For more info and how to sign up, see the FareShare website. (In smaller Tesco Express stores, the Trussell Trust is running similar collections until 28 Aug).

 

THIS WEEK'S POLL

How do you rate your bank account's service? Every six months, we ask for your help to track the quality of customer service provided by banks. By comparing your answers with last time, we can see which have got better or worse. So please tell us how you rate your bank account's service.

MoneySavers typically spend up to two hours a week on personal admin. In last week's poll, we asked how much time you spend on personal admin, from sorting bills to booking holidays, and 3,600 of you responded. The majority said they spend between 30 minutes and two hours sorting their personal affairs each week. But it varied based on who they live with - eg, 53% of those living on their own said they do less than an hour of admin per week, while 66% of those living with a partner and kids said it takes them more than an hour. See full personal admin poll results.

 
 

MONEYSAVING NEWS

- Top story: Give all primary school children a financial education, MPs urge
- Lloyds, Halifax and Bank of Scotland pay out £13.6m in compensation over misleading insurance letters

 
 

MONEY MORAL DILEMMA

Should we help pay for the fence our new neighbours put up without asking? We had an old but solid garden fence that our new neighbours ripped down without consulting us. They've now bought new fence panels and asked us to share the cost (there's nothing in the legal documents for either property about who's responsible for it). Should we pay up as we'll benefit from the fence too, or should the cost be theirs to bear as they didn't consult us? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should we help pay for the fence our neighbours put up? | Suggest an MMD | View past MMDs

 
 

MARTIN'S BLOG

- Martin Lewis: Money and Mental Health – what a year 2020/21

 
 

MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (WED 14 JUL ONWARDS)

Thu 15 Jul - This Morning, ITV, 10.45am, then phone-in from 11.25am

MSE TEAM APPEARANCES (SUBJECTS TBC)

Sat 17 Jul - BBC Radio Leicester, Mid-morning with Summaya Mughal, from 11am
Mon 19 Jul - BBC Radio Manchester, Drive with Phil Trow, from 2.20pm
Tue 20 Jul - BBC Radio Berkshire, Mid-morning with Sarah Walker, with Guy Anker, from 11.30am
Tue 20 Jul - BBC Radio Cambridgeshire, Mid-morning with Jeremy Sallis, from 12.40pm

 

WHAT'S THE GIFT YOU TREASURE THE MOST?

That's all for this week, but before we go... last week England footballer Mason Mount gave his Euro 2020 semi-final shirt to a young fan, who was clearly over the moon in a heart-warming moment that went viral on social media. It got us thinking... what have MoneySavers been given that they really treasure? One MoneySaver told us they'd been given a set of drumsticks by Keith Moon and another was given a charity football match medal by Chris Evans. But often it's not the thing but the memory that counts - meeting Martin and asking him a question at a Martin Lewis Money Show was one MoneySaver's top moment. Let us know your heart-warming tales in our  what do you treasure Facebook post.

We hope you save some money, stay safe,
The MSE team

 

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