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DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads |
ENERGY - IT'S ALL SHOOK UP... On Friday, the regulator Ofgem confirmed the new April Energy Price Cap, which will fall an average 12.3%. This dictates the price most homes in Eng, Scot & Wales pay for energy (so that's YOU, unless you're on a fixed or special tariff) as most firms just charge the max. It moves every three months, mostly based on average wholesale rates, yet there's a time-lag, eg, the Apr-Jun Cap is based on Nov-Feb rates. Here's my summary of the key need-to-knows (or watch my video explainer or read full details)...
Yet as unit rates are the majority of each bill in all normal circumstances, barring mostly empty homes, you'll STILL PAY LESS OVERALL from April, but the standing charge rise means higher users, especially with gas, save a higher percentage than lower users. After much lobbying I'm glad Ofgem is reviewing the standing charge, but its report is still weeks away. 3. PREPAY will become the cheapest way to pay for the foreseeable future. Prepay (key & card meters), which many of the most vulnerable use, were always the rip-off, so this is a staggering, welcome turnaround. Prepay standing charges are being cut to equal Direct Debit, yet prepay unit rates are cheaper. From April, prepay will be an average ~3% cheaper overall. But before you move to it, a word of caution... prepay deals tend to be few & far between, so if and when proper competition returns, the big discounts are likely to be for Direct Debit customers. So I strongly suspect Direct Debit will stay by far the overall cheapest for switchers, but for those who don't, prepay will undercut it. 4. Decent switching deals may restart from 1 April as Ofgem's changed one of the background rules that stop them. It's ending the 'Market Stabilisation Charge' launched mid-energy crisis, which means switch firm and the new provider must compensate your old one if it's undercutting it due to cheaper wholesale rates. I was fuming when it launched this and sadly lost my temper, using inappropriate language with Ofgem staff (which I apologised for) when I was told it was to "stop the harmful effects of competition" - ie, stop cheaper prices. So I am of course delighted to hear it's going, and hope it'll spur real competition to drive down prices - though Ofgem could've gone a step further. 5. You can undercut the Price Cap by 3%... The E.on Next Pledge tariff is open to switchers & existing customers who pay by Direct Debit. E.on promises it will remain roughly 3% below the Price Cap for a year (so £50/yr at typical use), so when the Cap drops, so will it. Therefore, as long as you're happy going to E.on, and have (or get) a smart meter, if you're going to stick on the Price Cap, you may as well move to this discounted tariff. It has £25 per fuel early exit penalties. 6. The cheapest fixes, if you want peace of mind. The big benefit of a fix is you know exactly what you'll pay. Yet the key is at what rate you fix. If the predictions are right (a big 'if'), over the next year you'll pay 18% less on average than you do now (or 21% if you're comparing against E.on), so you'd want to fix at around that price, not current prices, for it to look a winner. Last week when the Price Cap fall was predicted to be a bit bigger, we thought the British Gas Price Promise of a fix at £1/fuel lower than the Apr Price Cap looked good. Then, after the announcement, it looked less good, but it's now said it'll drop it to an average £30 lower. That's roughly 14% cheaper than current prices, the same as Outfox's fix - though the latter, like Octopus Energy's 13% cheaper existing-customer deal, has the advantage of no early exit penalties. See full cheap fix analysis. |
Millions of users - billions saved. Happy 21st birthday MoneySavingExpert.com. Find out where it all started in this special young-MSE film (done for our 20th last year). Martin: Is a Lifetime ISA win coming in next week's Budget?! It's reported the Chancellor has listened and will ditch the withdrawal fee for first-time buyers above the £450,000 limit. Read LISA campaign to succeed? FREE £200 to switch bank. If you missed last week's full free cash bank switching is BACK note, here's a reminder that sister banks NatWest* and RBS* now pay accepted switchers a FREE £200 and, via their Rewards account, £3/mth cashback if you meet certain criteria. That's overtaken Lloyds' FREE £175 plus perks, eg, 1yr Disney+. Ends Thu. Tesco shopper? Last chance to use/extend £18m of Clubcard vouchers. See Tesco alert. Coupons: 'Free' £1.20 energy drink, £6 off Pampers, 'free' £1.65 dog treats & more. See February's coupons. Ends Thu. Pay just '£4/mth' for a 30GB mobile Sim. This iD Mobile Sim (uses Three's signal) is £4/mth for the first three months, then £8/mth for the remaining nine, but you can CLAIM (don't forget) a £35 Amazon or Currys voucher - factor that in and it's equivalent to £4.09/mth over the 1yr contract. Want different data / network? Use Cheap Mobile Finder. Mother's Day deals, including £1.59 photocard, £25 delivered flowers, 25% off Wonderbly personalised book & more. See our full Mother's Day round-up. Related: Free/cheap ways to treat mum. Get FIVE months' 5% cashback (max £125) on all spending via Amex intro boost - great if big purchase due. Cashback cards pay you to spend on them, and the best cashback from a fee-free card is the Amex Cashback Everyday's 5% intro offer. It's now 5% for the first 5mths (was 3mths) and max £125 (was £100), then up to 1% after. So grab one, do all your normal spending on it, just ensure you pay it off IN FULL each month to avoid interest (and don't withdraw cash or bust the credit limit). To get any cashback, you need to spend £3,000+ in a year, so only do it if you'll hit that. Eligibility can be tricky, but our link takes you through a checker. Full info in Credit card rewards. 'I saved £684 haggling on my broadband.' Our success of the week comes from Dawn, who emailed: "I'm with Virgin Media and my bill was going to increase to £64/mth. After calling them and following the MSE broadband haggling tips, they've offered me a new price of £26/mth, saving me £684 over the contract term. Thank you for the information." If we've helped you save (on this, or owt else), send us your successes. Martin: 'What happened to my pledge to give £10m to charity?' 2024 update. "In June 2012, when I sold MSE (I'm still here though) I pledged £10m to charity. As that was a public pledge and I feel a duty of transparency, here's my latest blog on where I'm up to, and who's got what money." |
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How to pay less at Amazon... Online retail e-giant Amazon is a go-to for many as it's so easy (you could even say, not at all taxing), yet it's so vast there are areas few venture to, but which can cut costs. Our Amazon buyers' guide is full of tricks across its range, but today we've focused on its core shopping areas. Though do always check if you can buy cheaper elsewhere (PriceRunner's handy for that). 1. Amazon Warehouse: Big discounts on often new returned goods - Speedily find the bargains: Use our free Amazon Warehouse Discount Finder. - Best for? Up-to-date branded electricals, kitchen appliances, laptops, lawnmowers, games, jewellery, household items. - Consumer rights: You've statutory rights, but may not get the manufacturer warranty. Amazon Warehouse* sells returned items at knockdown prices - sometimes just as someone has changed their mind. Items are graded from 'acceptable' up to 'like new' and are usually priced far cheaper than buying new. It's a way to get current-model products that might otherwise be out of your price range. Sometimes they may be unpackaged, but you're told this. To spot the bargains, we built the Amazon Warehouse Discount Finder. Simply tell it what you're looking for and it'll show you how much you can save compared with buying new at Amazon.
We get many successes from it, such as from Auntrice, who said on our Forum: "I never knew about Amazon Warehouse until Martin's newsletter. Just purchased a what-looks-like-new Echo Show 8 camera, normally £110, for £55. Marvellous!" 2. Amazon Renewed: Used, previous-generation tech in top condition with a one-year warranty |
Martin's pod: Nightmare train travel, asking for a pay rise at work & more... All in the new The Martin Lewis Podcast. Listen via BBC Sounds, Spotify, Apple Podcasts or wherever you like to get your Martin fix. Get £50 cashback for investing £250. 2,000 available. MSE Blagged. We've seen better past offers, but this is the current best and one of the first from InvestEngine (so there'll be many newbies out there). Keep the £250 invested for a year and you'll get the £50 - so it's a good head start to hopeful investment growth. See full pros & cons in Robo-investing cashback. Grüum home fragrance bundle £15 delivered (normally £56). MSE Blagged. Includes two candles, two diffusers and wax melts. 15,000 available. Grüum Got Avios you won't use for flights? Swap 'em to Nectar now. From 11 March, you'll need more Avios to get the same number of Nectar points - so if you've nowt else to use your Avios on, here's how to swap them. Free 3mths' access to 7,000+ digital magazines, including Gardeners' World, Vogue. MSE Blagged. For new AND returning users. With additional 10% off for 12 months. Mag-nificent FREE National Outdoor Expo tickets. Event aimed at outdoor enthusiasts - walking, climbing, camping, bushcraft and more. So pencil in the weekend of 23 to 24 March at Birmingham's NEC. Normally £18. 5,000 available |
AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS
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THIS WEEK'S POLL Do you have an electric vehicle (or are you thinking of getting one)? The push towards electric vehicles (EVs) is likely to become more of a focus as we move closer to the 2035 ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars (for all the need-to-knows on EVs, see our Electric vehicles guide). Let us know in this week's poll whether you've already got an EV, or if you'd consider buying one next time you get a new vehicle. Vote in this week's poll. More than one in 10 MoneySavers spend over £1,000 a year on birthdays. As it was MSE's 21st birthday last week, we asked how much you spend each year celebrating friends' and family's big days (and your own, of course). Of the 4,000 people who responded, most told us they spend less than £500. Yet while a frugal 12% spend less than £50, 14% splash out a whopping £1,000+ over the year. See full birthday spending poll results. |
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MONEY MORAL DILEMMA Can we uninvite people to our postponed wedding to save money? We're now replanning our postponed wedding and we're looking again at the guest list. Some people had accepted our initial invitation, but aren't on our 'A-list' of guests, and as we would now like to spend less, is it OK to uninvite some of those guests who had already said 'yes'? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Can we uninvite wedding guests? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma |
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MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (TUE 27 FEB ONWARDS) Wed 28 Feb - Ask Martin Lewis, BBC Radio 5 Live, 1pm |
TRAINERS OVER £30, FANCY PHONES - WHAT DO YOUR KIDS HAVE TO PAY FOR WITH THEIR POCKET MONEY? That's all for this week, but before we go... MSE Forumites have been discussing what they buy for their kids, and what they expect their kids to fund from their own pocket money. Parents paying for mobile phones is common, but one Forumite says they fund a basic model and if their child wants something 'better', they have to meet the difference. Another applied the same rule to footwear, with a £30 limit for new trainers and anything above that coming from pocket money. Several posters told us they paid for driving lessons on the basis it's a life skill. And one Forumite's philosophy is that while pocket money increases with a child's age, so does the need for them to pay for 'boring but necessary' expenses, teaching them budgeting skills for life. Tell us what your kids pay for themselves - or what your parents expected you to stump up for - in our forum thread. We hope you save some money, |
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