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Credit cards are a convenient method of obtaining credit. They are available
from all major lenders and provide flexibility for the consumer. Some basic facts
about credit cards are set out on this page.Top 3 recommended cardsThese UK credit cards are ranked according to their popularity with users of this web site.
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Step 1 - Which Card?
Standard - Visa and MasterCard are two of the common credit cards available.
Platinum and Gold cards - these are usually available for people with higher levels
of income, and have benefits attached to them.
Charity and Affinity Cards - these operate in the same way as standard credit
cards but a small percentage of what you spend is donated to the charity to which
the card is connected.
Loyalty Cards - These cards tend to offer incentives such as cash bonuses, AIR
MILES, points and other discounts.
Pros
Credit cards are international and can be used all over the world, wherever you
see the logo on your card. Credit cards can provide you with instant access to
cash, (for which there is usually a fee payable). Goods can be purchased quickly
and easily, in person, over the phone, or online! Some companies offer insurance
on your purchases, and can protect your goods in the event of loss or theft. They
can also provide you with travel insurance.
Cons
Credit cards tend to be expensive and are hard to control. It is advisable to
keep your receipts of purchases made. Mistakes do happen and you should cross
check your receipts with your monthly statement. Any discrepancies should be reported
immediately to the company. Other forms of borrowing can prove cheaper, e.g. a
personal loan or extension of your existing mortgage. These options should be
considered before applying for a credit card. Purchases made abroad may not appear
on your statement for a few months and it is therefore difficult to determine
whether or not they have been debited to your account.
Rates And Fees
Credit cards attract annual fees and interest charges. Interest rates tend to
be high and vary between companies. Some companies provide interest free periods.
Other companies have penalty payments for late or returned payments or if you
exceed your credit limit.
Repayment Options
Most credit card companies insist on you repaying the minimum repayment. This
can be found on your monthly statement. Alternatively, they request that you repay
a percentage of the outstanding balance, for example, 3-5%.
Deciding Which Card
In deciding which card is the best for you, you will need to assess how you use
the card. For example, if you use the card for convenience shopping and would
want to repay the full balance at the end of the month, then cards that offer
a long interest free period with no annual fee could prove more appropriate. If
you use the card for ongoing borrowing, and intend to pay off the minimum amount
every month, then a shorter interest free period with lower rates might suit you
better. If you travel frequently, it may be worth considering a card, which allows
you to pay your bills via direct debit.
This information applies to England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
Credit is borrowing money, usually to buy goods. Interest usually
has to be paid on a loan. There may also be administration costs to pay, and
interest may be charged on these too. A creditor is an individual or a company
making a loan and may also be known as the lender.
This is the most common type of credit agreement. Under credit sale, you buy the goods at the cash price. You usually have to pay interest but some suppliers offer interest-free credit. Repayment is made in instalments. You are the legal owner of the goods as soon as the contract is made and the goods cannot be returned if you change your mind. The supplier cannot repossess the goods if you fall behind in repayments but can take court action to recover the money owed if you are in arrears. Credit sale agreements are now more common than hire purchase agreements and it is important not to confuse the two.
Under a hire purchase (HP) agreement, you are technically hiring goods until you pay the final instalment. You will not own the goods until then. This means that you can end the agreement and return the goods at any time. However, you will owe any overdue instalments and, if less than half of the total price has been paid, you may also have to pay the difference.
The company which has made the loan (the lender) may be able to repossess the goods if, for example, you fall behind with payments. The lender does not have to sell the repossessed goods to reduce your debt.
This type of agreement is similar to an HP agreement and usually includes the condition that the goods do not belong to you until you have paid the final instalment. The lender may be able to repossess the goods if you fall behind with payments.
These are most commonly offered by department stores, car dealers and electricity and gas companies. The shop or firm arranges a loan from a finance company for the purchase of a specific item, for example, a washing machine or car, or paying for goods and services such as double glazing.
Credit cards are supplied by banks, finance companies or shops. They can be used to buy goods or obtain money from a bank. You will get a monthly statement saying how much you owe (including interest) and will be told the minimum amount you must pay that month. You may also have to pay an annual fee.
A trader can charge you more for buying goods with a credit card than if you pay by cash or cheque. A trader who does this must display a notice in the shop saying this, and the price differences.
Some credit card companies issue cheque books. If you use a credit card cheque to buy goods, money spent is debited from your credit card account but there is usually no interest-free period and there is often a handling fee.
The difference between a charge card and a credit card is that the amount borrowed on a charge card must be repaid in full at the end of a given period, usually a month. Interest is not charged on the amount but you may have to pay an annual fee for the card.
A bank or building society can grant you a loan or agree that your account can be overdrawn. It can make a personal loan to you if you are not a customer. The bank may ask for security for a loan, for example, house deeds or an insurance policy. Any security offered may be at risk if you default on a loan.
In England and Wales, for more information about banks and building societies, see Banks and building societies in Consumer fact sheets.
A mortgage is given by a building society or bank to buy property. An extra mortgage on the property, called a second mortgage, can be given, for example, for home improvements. The lender will charge a higher rate of interest on the second mortgage.
Credit brokers arrange loans from, for example, insurance or finance companies and make a charge for this. If the broker has not arranged a loan within six months the maximum the broker can charge is £5.
Mail order shopping is usually arranged through a catalogue and is normally interest free, the customer paying only the price of the purchase in instalments. However, goods bought in this way may be more expensive.
The doorstep sale or promotion of goods or services, such as double glazing or home improvements, on credit is illegal unless the company has a licence to sell credit outside trade premises. Any agreement that is improperly made may not be enforceable.
It is a criminal offence to try to make a cash loan outside
trade premises unless the visit is made to your home in response to a written
and signed request. Any agreement that is improperly made may not be enforceable.
If you have entered into an agreement of this type you should consult an experienced
adviser, for example, at a Citizens Advice Bureau. To search for details of
your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice by email, click on nearest CAB.
Many shops have their own types of credit accounts. These include monthly accounts (where interest will be charged if the amount is not paid off in full at the end of the month), and budget accounts (where you pay a regular amount each month to cover the cost of goods bought throughout the year).
These can be exchanged for goods, usually clothing and soft furnishings. You repay the amount to a company agent who normally calls at your home. Interest rates are often high for this type of credit.
Pawnbrokers lend money against the value of property left with them. They must give a receipt known as a ticket. Pawnbrokers agree to keep the property for at least six months but you can get it back at any time during that period by paying off the loan plus interest. The period can be extended by paying the interest only and re-pledging the property.
A credit union is a self-help co-operative whose members pool their savings to provide each other with credit at a low interest rate. If a member fails to repay a loan, the credit union can seek repayment through the courts.
Money lenders usually lend small amounts of money at high rates of interest.
There may be sources of credit more suitable than using a money lender. If you are considering borrowing from a money lender, you should first consult an experienced adviser, for example, at a Citizens Advice Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice by email, click on nearest CAB .
Most types of credit and hire agreements are regulated by the Consumer Credit Act 1974, which gives a borrower some important rights (see below). An agreement will be regulated if:-
If you enter into a credit agreement which is regulated under the Consumer Credit Act you must be given a written copy of the agreement when you take out the loan. This must set out:-
Agreements which are exempt from the Consumer Credit Act include:-
Lenders use a number of methods to decide whether or not to give credit. If you are told you cannot have credit you can apply again, either to the same company or another one. You have no right to be granted credit or to be given a reason why credit has not been granted, although some creditors may give this information.
Points are awarded for such things as occupation, salary, marital status and area of residence. Credit is given if you score enough points. If you apply for credit, you must be told if this method has been used.
If your application has been refused, you can ask for the main reason for refusal and for the decision to be reviewed by the creditor. You should give the creditor any additional information that you think should be taken into account.
A credit reference agency builds up information on your financial position from the electoral roll, county court judgments, bankruptcy details, and payment record in previous agreements. The payment record may include details of other people living at the same address, and their record may affect whether or not you are given credit.
If you have had your application for credit refused because of information on a credit reference agency’s records you can ask the creditor which credit reference agency it used. You can then get a copy of the record from the agency. You will have to pay a fee for this. You can ask for your record to be corrected if it is incorrect or misleading. If the record includes details of other people living at the same address, you can ask to be dissociated from them. You may also be able to ask to be assessed as a separate individual. There is, however, still no guarantee that credit will be given.The contact details of the main credit reference agencies are:-
Consumer Help Service
PO Box 8000
Nottingham NG80 7WF
Tel: 0870 241 6212
Website: http://www.experian.co.uk/
Credit File Advice Centre
PO Box 1140
Bradford BD1 5US
Tel: 0870 010 0583
Website: http://www.equifax.co.uk/
Consumer Services team
PO Box 491
Leeds LS3 1WZ
Tel: 0870 060 1414
Website: http://www.callcredit.co.uk/
In England and Wales, for more information about credit reference agencies, see Credit fact sheet in Credit and debt fact sheets.
A lender can ask for a reference from your bank but the bank cannot provide this without your authorisation. The bank may charge you for providing the reference. You are entitled to a copy of the reference given by your bank. If you think you have been refused credit because the information is incorrect you should contact the bank.
A creditor may draw a ‘no credit’ ring round a certain area or address, for example, a block of flats, a housing estate or a particular street, and refuse credit solely on this basis. If you have been refused credit and think it is because you live in a red-lined district you should report the company you suspect to the local Trading Standards Department (whose phone number will be under the name of the local authority in the local telephone directory).
If you are refused credit and want to dispute the decision
you should consult an experienced adviser, for example, a Citizens Advice Bureau.
To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice
by email, click on nearest CAB.
Regulated credit agreements (see under heading Regulated credit agreements) may allow you to cancel the agreement if you want to change your mind. You have a ‘cooling off period’ in which you can change your mind. You can cancel the agreement if:-
If you are entitled to cancel the agreement, you must be sent a cancellation notice within seven days of signing the agreement explaining that you have the right to cancel the agreement. A cancellation form will be enclosed with the notice and you can use this (or write a letter) to cancel the agreement. If you do want to cancel, the cancellation must be sent to the lender within five days of receiving the notice, preferably by recorded delivery. If the goods are bought from a mail order catalogue agent, the agreement may say that it can be cancelled within 14 days of the agreement being signed and no cancellation notice will be sent. If you cancel an agreement during the cooling off period, you must:-
The supplier:-
If you have made a pre-payment for goods or services which you are buying on credit (as a deposit or part-payment), you should get all of your money back when you cancel unless you arranged your own credit.
If you have bought goods under a hire purchase or a conditional sale agreement (see under heading Types of credit) and have already made some payments, you can end the agreement by returning the goods. However, you may still have to pay any arrears and an amount of money which, when added to the amount of money paid already, comes to half the total price of the goods, if the agreement is regulated under the Consumer Credit Act (see under heading Regulated credit agreements).
In England and Wales, for more information about cancelling a credit agreement, see Credit fact sheet in Credit and debt fact sheets.
If you have bought goods or services costing more than £35, from someone who called at your home or work, you may have a seven day cooling off period. This is the case even if you did not pay for them on credit. (If you are outside the cooling off period, the right to cancel will depend on the agreement with the trader).
You may also have a seven day cooling off period when you buy goods or services through what is known as a distance sale. A distance sale is a sale by telephone, mail order or the internet. Again you do not have to pay by credit to have this seven day cooling off period.
In England and Wales, for more information about your rights when you buy goods at home, see Home shopping and Buying over the internet in Consumer fact sheets.
The following credit agreements cannot be cancelled:-
If you fall into arrears, how this is dealt with will depend
on the type of agreement.
If the goods were bought on hire purchase or conditional sale (see under heading Types of credit), the credit company can repossess the goods as they remain its property until all the payments have been made. In England and Wales if you have paid over one third of the purchase price, the company will have to get a court order before it can take the goods back. In Scotland, a court order may be required at any time, though the law is unclear.
If you bought goods with other types of credit, they belong to you, and the credit company cannot repossess them. If the company agrees, you can return the goods voluntarily. However, if you fall into debt, you may be taken to court to force you to pay the money you owe. Extra interest may also have to be paid on arrears.
If you have problems with repayments you should consult an experienced adviser, for example, at a Citizens Advice Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice by email, click on nearest CAB.In England and Wales, for more information about your rights when a credit company wants to cancel your agreement, see Credit fact sheet in Credit and debt fact sheets
A lender may try to vary the agreement. The change must not be unreasonable. It can only be done if there is a term in the agreement allowing for variation, for example, because of a change in the interest rate, or if both sides to the agreement do not object.
If the lender wants to vary the agreement they must give you,
the borrower, seven days’ notice before doing so. However, if the right to vary
is part of the original agreement, the lender may simply announce the changes
in the national press.
You can repay the total outstanding amount of a loan by giving
written notice that you want to end the agreement. If you have a regulated agreement
(see under heading Regulated
credit agreements) you will normally be entitled to a rebate of interest
and other charges. The formula for calculating the amount of rebate is complicated
and if you are considering doing this, you should consult an experienced adviser,
for example, the local authority trading standards officer or a Citizens Advice
Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that can
give advice by email, click on nearest CAB.
If you have entered into a credit agreement at interest rates
far above the usual hire purchase or bank loan rates, you may be able to go
to the county court (sheriff court in Scotland) to change the agreement. The
agreement need not be a regulated one for the rules about extortionate credit
to apply.
If you want to do this you should consult an experienced adviser, for example,
a Citizens Advice Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including
those that can give advice by email, click on nearest CAB .
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You have the same rights when buying goods or services on credit as you have when paying cash. Goods must match their description, be fit for their purpose and of satisfactory quality. Services must be performed with reasonable care and skill, within a reasonable time and at reasonable cost.
For more information, see Problems with goods. For more information, see Problems with services. If you have a complaint about goods or services you should first go to the supplier. However, if the supplier refuses to help, has gone out of business, or has disappeared, the credit company may be legally responsible, depending on the credit agreement.
If the goods were bought under a hire purchase, conditional sale or credit sale agreement, the company that gave the credit (either a shop or a finance company) is responsible for any faults.
If the goods or services were bought by credit card, credit card cheque, trading check or with credit arranged by the supplier and the value was below £100, the supplier is responsible. If the goods or services are valued between £100 and £30,000 both creditor and supplier are responsible (except in the case of a credit card cheque where only the supplier is responsible) if:-
If the purchase was made using someone else’s credit card you cannot claim against the credit card company, even if the card holder said you could use the card.
If you are an additional card holder, but are not the person who signed the agreement to have the credit card, you may also not be able to claim against the credit card company. If you want to make a claim, you should make a joint claim with the person who signed the agreement for the credit card.
The credit company should be kept informed if you are having difficulties with the supplier over faulty goods or services.
If you bought the goods abroad using a credit card and the goods are faulty, the Office of Fair Trading believes that the credit card company is responsible. However, some companies continue to refuse to pay out on claims for goods bought overseas. If you have arranged your own credit, for example, through a bank loan, you must take up any complaint with the supplier. You must not stop making payments as the creditor has no responsibility for faulty goods or services.
If you are having problems over faulty goods or services bought
on credit you should consult an experienced adviser, for example, at a Citizens
Advice Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that
can give advice by email, click on nearest CAB.
If your credit card is lost or stolen, you should inform the
credit card company immediately by telephone and confirm the loss in writing
within seven days. You will only be liable for a maximum £50 for any criminal
use of the card before you report its loss. You will not have to pay for any
misuse of the card after you have reported its loss. If the card is lost or
stolen before you receive it, you will not be responsible for any misuse of
the card.
If you have left goods with a pawnbroker and lose the ticket (receipt) and the amount you borrowed was £75 or less, the pawnbroker may give you a standard form to fill in to say that you have lost the ticket but that the goods are yours. If the credit was over £75, or if it is less but the pawnbroker will not accept a standard form, you will have to go to a magistrate or commissioner for oaths to swear that the goods are your property. There is a fee for this. The goods must then either be redeemed or a new six-month agreement made.
If you have left goods with a pawnbroker and do not redeem
them, they will become the pawnbroker’s property if the amount borrowed on them
is £75 or less and the period the goods were left for was over six months. In
any other case, at the end of the agreed period, the pawnbroker can sell the
goods. If the loan was for more than £100 (excluding interest charges) the pawnbroker
must give you at least 14 days notice that they intend to sell the goods, giving
the asking price. You can redeem the goods within that period, or before they
are sold.
If you are taking out credit you may be asked to provide a guarantor. A guarantor is someone who will be responsible for the debt if you do not keep to the agreement. Guarantors are commonly asked for when the customer is under 21 or is not a householder. However, a credit company can insist on a guarantor for any agreement.
If you have agreed to become a guarantor you cannot withdraw from the agreement. You will be legally responsible for the debt and may have to pay any outstanding money owed.
If you are a guarantor and are being pursued for money which
is owed, you should consult an experienced adviser, for example, at a Citizens
Advice Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that
can give advice by email, click on nearest CAB.
If the person who has taken out credit dies before completing all the payments, any outstanding debt becomes a claim on their estate. A relative of the dead person should not offer to take responsibility for the debt before the estate has been settled.
This situation is very complex and help should be sought from
an experienced adviser, for example, a Citizens Advice Bureau. To search for
details of your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice by email,
click on nearest CAB.
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