Apple Watch £9?, last chance - DITCH O2, Free £200+ for Xmas, Costco tips, savings safety boost, top 0% debt shift + £20
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| DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
| FREE CASH in time for Christmas... One-in, one-out, but there are still seven banks willing to pay for your current account custom - some in time for Christmas - and if not, you get much-needed cash in the New Year. Most of these legal bribes come from top bank accounts with strong financial perks and/or top service. And, if you're wondering, yes some people do make £1,000s by repeatedly switching banks (though you need to be careful - the link takes you through it). Switching's usually quick & easy. To get the free cash, you need to use the bank's seven-working-day switch service (so it takes roughly 10 days). This closes your old account and moves all your money, Direct Debits and standing orders for you. Payments to the old account are auto-forwarded. You'll need to pass a not-too-harsh credit check.
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| New. Top 35mth 0% debt shift now gives £20 cashback, so transfer under £800 and it's 'FEE-FREE'. A 0% balance transfer is where you get a new card that pays off debts on existing cards for you, so you owe it instead, but interest-free for a set time. HSBC's 35mth 0% card (existing HSBC customer? Use this link) was already our top-pick longest 0% card, and now it gives £20 cashback for shifting £250+ on to it within 60 days. That all but covers the one-off 3.19% balance transfer fee (min £5) if you shift under £800, and substantially reduces it if you shift more. Pay it off before the 0% ends to avoid the 24.9% rep APR interest. Full info and options in top balance transfers. News. Savings safety limit to rise to £120,000. Currently, the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) covers up to £85,000 in savings per person, per institution. Today (Tue) we learned it'll rise on 1 Dec, and the 'lifetime events' limit will rise too. See Are your savings safe? Related: Top 4.56% cash ISA | Top 4.51% easy-access savings. Is Costco cheapest for your Xmas shop? We spot-checked prices for festive faves, eg, Lindt 3D Teddy Advent calendar & Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label champagne - see how Costco compares with the supermarkets. Many unknowingly qualify for Costco membership (£42/yr) and petrol savings alone may pay for it. 18 Costco tips
Martin video. 'Repaying your student loan? Check your account NOW! Over 1m of you can reclaim £100s.' Watch Martin's 4 reasons you can reclaim student loans explainer on his YouTube channel (& do subscribe for more), taken from his ITV show last week. Plus, read our how to reclaim student loans help. £11 for one-litre Baileys. Now at two big supermarkets, normally c.£22. Where to get cheap Baileys (pls be Drinkaware).
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| Last chance. O2 mobile contract customer? Millions have been told 'we're hiking our price hike!' If that's you, ACT NOW or lose the right to switch & save penalty-free Eg, switch to 40GB data for '£3.25/mth' with cheaper-than-chips Sims On 23 Oct, O2 started contacting customers to tell them it'd be hiking prices in April by more than it said it would when they signed up. Martin went ballistic, saying it "made a mockery of regulator Ofcom's new rules", where you have to be told when you sign up of planned price hikes, and since then we've been campaigning hard on this. Yet the most important thing you need to understand is... As O2's hiking prices by more than it said it would when you signed up, it must let you leave penalty-free within 30 days of notification & that time is up THIS WEEKEND for many. So you need to ACT NOW to see whether you can save. Many O2 customers already pay more than they need to (see Cheap Mobile Finder). And as O2's behaviour feels disreputable, it deserves a corporate bloody nose. We've heard from large numbers of customers who have either switched away or haggled a lower price, which suggests it's getting that. So, on to your options...
O2 customer? Quick FAQs:
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| AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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| MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Should I give my nephew £10,000 now even though he'll likely fritter it away? Following a small inheritance I received four years ago, I gave my niece £10,000 towards a house deposit. I want to do the same for my nephew, her brother, but his life's very different. Although he's 29 he's not saving for anything in particular, and his parents say any money that comes his way quickly disappears on expensive restaurants. But I'm not keen on delaying giving it to him indefinitely as I'm getting older and Inheritance Tax could become an issue. Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should I give my spendthrift nephew £10,000 now or later? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma (MMD) | View past MMDs |
| MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (WED 19 NOV ONWARDS) Thu 20 Nov - Ask Martin Lewis, BBC Radio 5 Live, midday |
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