

Ultimately, people should avoid being blinded by the switching incentive. Taken together, account holders can therefore earn up to £90 credit interest per year if they hold a minimum of £5,000 in the account at all times. It's not possible to earn interest on any part of a balance over £5,000. On the first £4,000 it pays 1.5 per cent and then between £4,000 and £5,000 it pays 3 per cent. That could make for a cash saving of £72 on cinema tickets over the course of the year.Ĭlub Lloyds also pays interest on in-credit interest - something which is quite rare at the moment. Equally an adult Vue cinema ticket will typically cost around £11 or £12. The Disney+ subscription could save someone £79.90 a year. Lloyds Bank has a £150 switcher offer - for new customers switching from another bank to a Club Lloyds Bank Account before 17 July. There is a £3 monthly fee to maintain the account - but this is waived each month as long as account holders pay in £2,000 or more.Īccount holders can chose either 12 month Disney+ subscription, a choice of six Vue or Odeon cinema tickets, a magazine subscription, or a Coffee Club and Gourmet Society membership. Those switching to the Club Lloyds account can choose from a range of 'lifestyle benefits' each year, which if used can be a real money saver. While offering a lesser £150, Lloyds Bank might arguably be a better option than TSB's deal as well.
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TSB does also offer the fee-free use abroad, but only when using its £3 monthly Spend & Save Plus current account. Gap between inflation and the top savings rates shrinks drastically - will savers finally see an inflation-beating account after more than two years?Ĭustomers opening a First Direct current account receive a £175 cash bonus if they pay in at least £1,000 within three months.įirst Direct also offers up to £250 interest-free overdraft, access to a market-leading regular savings account paying 7 per cent and now fee-free use of its debit card abroad.now consumers are paying the price, says ALEX BRUMMER Folly of printing money: BofE is guilty of group think.Stop the savings rot: Britons still have a third of their easy-access cash in accounts earning 1% or less.I'm a mum of four and set up my own crafting business but I'm not making money - do you have any tips? BANK OF DAVE replies.Inflation might still be running high but a boom in company registrations is a bright spot in the current climate, says SME expert Emma Jones.New 'stealth tax attack' on inherited pension pots threat: Government is sowing confusion and upending financial plans, warn industry experts.SHARE OF THE WEEK: NatWest boss likely to face further scrutiny over Nigel Farage with bank's half-year results.INVESTING EXPLAINED: What you need to know about moats, shielding a 21st century business from competition.Tempted to get solar panels fitted? Watch out for these five rip-off red flags before taking the plunge.From backing railroads to computer chips: How investment trust SAINTS navigated a 150-year investing odyssey.Guy Hands, one of Britain's most prominent financiers, stepping down from his private equity firm Terra Firma.Revolution Beauty being probed by City watchdog over potential breaches of market abuse dating back two years.After temperatures hit record highs last month, summer sunshine heats up retail sales.


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Cook up some fun! Goodbye fitted units - free-standing kitchens are flexible and full of personality.Inside Britain's most luxurious home available to rent: This seven-bed Hyde Park pad costs £40k-a-week.London's supercars under threat: Spate of Ferrari thefts has affluent owners scrambling to find secure storage and struggling to get cover.British Gas won't let me have a new home display for my smart meter even though I offered to pay for it: How can I get one now?.Do I need to act now to bag a 6% fixed savings rate and have we reached the peak? Here's what the experts think.Best and worst counties for buying a home under asking price: Why haggling in Gwynedd could work but Bristol will prove way trickier.
