Little Victories
I recently received a £2 voucher from a supermarket after complaining vociferously about the poor quality of their own-brand Rich Tea biscuits, which I spent on more tasty, tasty biscuits. Tell us about your trivial victories that have made life a tiny bit better.
( , Thu 10 Feb 2011, 12:07)
I recently received a £2 voucher from a supermarket after complaining vociferously about the poor quality of their own-brand Rich Tea biscuits, which I spent on more tasty, tasty biscuits. Tell us about your trivial victories that have made life a tiny bit better.
( , Thu 10 Feb 2011, 12:07)
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£130 charges for going £2 over, you say?
Try having a £1500 limit, being overdrawn by, ooh, £1480, and then having a £23 direct debit bounced. Cost me £35 to bounce it, plus £28 for going over my limit, plus £28 for BEING over my limit. Plus a £25 charge from the people the direct debit was supposed to be paying.
I couldn't get back inside the £1500 limit after that so I kind of stopped using the account. A year later, when I went bankrupt, the debit balance on that account alone stood at £3,800. £2,300 of that was made up of charges and interest. In fact out of the whole £22k bankruptcy I reckon only £4k of it was actual money I'd spent, and that was on rent and bills.
( , Thu 10 Feb 2011, 23:35, 2 replies)
Try having a £1500 limit, being overdrawn by, ooh, £1480, and then having a £23 direct debit bounced. Cost me £35 to bounce it, plus £28 for going over my limit, plus £28 for BEING over my limit. Plus a £25 charge from the people the direct debit was supposed to be paying.
I couldn't get back inside the £1500 limit after that so I kind of stopped using the account. A year later, when I went bankrupt, the debit balance on that account alone stood at £3,800. £2,300 of that was made up of charges and interest. In fact out of the whole £22k bankruptcy I reckon only £4k of it was actual money I'd spent, and that was on rent and bills.
( , Thu 10 Feb 2011, 23:35, 2 replies)
"Cost me £35 to bounce it, plus £28 for going over my limit..."
If they let you go over your limit, then why did the direct debit bounce?
( , Fri 11 Feb 2011, 15:38, closed)
If they let you go over your limit, then why did the direct debit bounce?
( , Fri 11 Feb 2011, 15:38, closed)
I've had a DD bounce then get payed.
Around the same ammout as the OP too (£28). That meant a bounce charge, and overdrawn charge and a charge for paying a DD when overdrawn.
The charges are a complete scam but, sadly, those in power won't declare them illegal despite the fact they are by any logical intepretation of the UKs contract laws.
( , Fri 11 Feb 2011, 17:25, closed)
Around the same ammout as the OP too (£28). That meant a bounce charge, and overdrawn charge and a charge for paying a DD when overdrawn.
The charges are a complete scam but, sadly, those in power won't declare them illegal despite the fact they are by any logical intepretation of the UKs contract laws.
( , Fri 11 Feb 2011, 17:25, closed)
Letting
you go overdrawn wouldn't satisfy the "liquidated damages v penalties clauses". Bouncing a direct debit and then charging you would, yet, it's allowed to continue with impunity.
Most now have dropped the amount considerably, but it's still there.
( , Sat 12 Feb 2011, 12:36, closed)
you go overdrawn wouldn't satisfy the "liquidated damages v penalties clauses". Bouncing a direct debit and then charging you would, yet, it's allowed to continue with impunity.
Most now have dropped the amount considerably, but it's still there.
( , Sat 12 Feb 2011, 12:36, closed)
You got F'd in the A
However, I took issue with the thieving behaviour as well as the money issue. It is just absolutely mind-blowing that this was legal practice.
( , Fri 11 Feb 2011, 18:32, closed)
However, I took issue with the thieving behaviour as well as the money issue. It is just absolutely mind-blowing that this was legal practice.
( , Fri 11 Feb 2011, 18:32, closed)
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