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00:00The UK's biggest credit reference agency, Experian, is about to tell millions of its customers their credit scores will drop.
00:22If that's you, what does it mean in practice?
00:25Credit scoring is shrouded by grey mist.
00:28Tonight, I want to blow them away.
00:31I want to show you the truth of how it really works, what you need to do, and I will finish with my crucial key tips to boost your acceptance odds.
00:41Now, this isn't just about the obvious mortgages and credit cards and loans, where credit scoring can even impact the rate you get.
00:49Credit checks may affect things you pay ahead for too, like mobile phone contracts and sometimes energy direct debit tariffs.
00:59Then, in my news you can use, new figures out show 1.1 million graduates have paid more student loan back than they should have done in just the last tax year.
01:10I will show you how to reclaim hundreds or thousands of pounds of it.
01:15And British savings bonds are about to get better, half-priced Christmas trees, a Ryanair warning and cheap theatre tickets.
01:22Now, to our own showstopper, Jeanette Kwachi, everybody.
01:25Thank you very much.
01:28I am your leading lady.
01:29I'm happy to be back, but we want to hear from you, so please do send us your questions on X or on threads.
01:35Use the hashtag MartinLewis or you can email the team MartinLewis at ITV.com.
01:40If we don't use your question tonight, we may use it in a future show.
01:43And a huge welcome, as always, to our studio audience.
01:46Wave your wallet, everybody!
01:48We love that.
01:49You're amazing.
01:50That's right.
01:51So, Martin, we had an enormous response to your call-out last week, saying that people could leave O2 because it's hiking, it's price hike, if you like.
01:59Just wanted to show you a few messages.
02:01This is coming from Nicola.
02:02She's ditched and she's switched.
02:03She says,
02:04I saw your O2 increase information this week, requested my PAC code and switched to a new provider.
02:09I got a great offer for three months, pocketed a saving of £38, £25 a month, £459 a year.
02:16Wow.
02:17New sim up and running, O2 boycats.
02:21So, if you watched last week, you know I got on my soapbox about this.
02:24O2 put up the price hike.
02:25It had previously said when people signed up, it would give them.
02:28So, it was a price hike on the price hike mid-contract.
02:30Crucially, if you get that notification, you've got 30 days in which you can leave.
02:35And then, you might be able to go and save a lot of money.
02:38And I'm encouraging people to do so because we want it to cost O2 in the pockets so that it never behaves like this again.
02:45And other companies think, we don't want to do that either.
02:47Yeah.
02:48Sean, he's taking your advice here.
02:49And Sean has haggled.
02:50He said,
02:51I rang up O2 yesterday and after a phone call, I stayed with them but saved £34 a month on my two contracts with more data, a huge saving of £408 a year.
03:01It would be great.
03:04Now, this is the interesting one because when I told people their rights last week, normally when you're at the end of the contract, you can use that as an opportunity to haggle, benchmark the best deal elsewhere, take it to your firm.
03:14But because this is a unique experience, this 30-day notification that you can leave, I wasn't 100% sure it would work with O2 like it would at the end of the contract.
03:23So I asked people to try.
03:24Sean is a success.
03:25And frankly, I've had hundreds of other people who've taken this opportunity to go to O2 and say, I will leave you unless you give me a better deal.
03:31And they've got better deals.
03:32So that's working.
03:33Fabulous.
03:34Right. Now, there is a question though. It's coming from Shirley.
03:36Sure.
03:37It's a follow-up question.
03:38She said, I've seen your item on O2.
03:40I just asked for a PAC code and they've come back saying I need to pay the device off in full.
03:44Is that correct?
03:46It's very interesting.
03:47So PAC code is a porting authorization code that you get when you're changing mobile phone number.
03:51Listen, I've seen some of those messages and what actually says it, it does say you need to pay this off in full.
03:57But I think that is a terrible piece of phrasing by O2.
04:01I'm going to hope it's accidental and not deliberate.
04:04Certainly something the regulator should look at.
04:06What that means is you're still going to have to pay your handset.
04:10It doesn't mean you have to pay all of your handset now.
04:13You were paying it by the month and you can continue to pay it by the month, but you'll have to pay everything that they owe them on the same plan.
04:19But when they say pay it off in full, it sounds like you have to give them the money now, doesn't it?
04:22It's poor communication, bad phrasing.
04:25I hope it hasn't deliberately been done to put people off switching if it has.
04:28That's something the regulator should look at.
04:30You can leave O2's airtime plan and keep paying your handset costs by the month, just as you were doing before.
04:36You're free to leave, Shirley.
04:37OK, hopefully that helps, Shirley.
04:39Now, I know we're going to get into credit scoring in this one later, the meat of the show.
04:43Something I wanted to ask you first, though, is a question that's coming from Amy O.
04:47Oh, there it is.
04:48There it is.
04:49I've heard there's a way you can claim back a student loan which you may have overpaid on.
04:53How do I do this and how do I know if this applies to me?
04:56Absolutely.
04:57We've just got brand new figures out on this from the student loans company, so I'm going to do the first part of my news you can use now.
05:03OK, so the new figures say 1.1 million university leavers and graduates have overpaid their student loans in the 24-25 tax year.
05:14And that adds to at least 4 million people from figures and requests that we've given them for information in the past.
05:19So there could be 5 million of you out there who are owed money.
05:23There are four reasons, but the first reason is the big reason.
05:28It's when you repaid your loan but you didn't earn enough to need to repay it.
05:33Over a million people in the last tax year did this.
05:35Now, the rules state absolutely plainly you only need to repay the student loan if you earn over the annual threshold in a tax year.
05:43What your annual threshold is depends which plan you're on.
05:47So we'll hold on this graphic so you can read your graphic as I go through.
05:51I'm going to focus on Plan 2 loans because that's the one with by far the most people on.
05:56England starters, it's when you started university and where you were resident, 2012 to 2022, and wealth starters from 2012 onwards.
06:03Your repayment threshold is £28,470 a year.
06:07You repay 9% of everything you earn over that in a year.
06:10That's how it works.
06:12But PAYE, payroll, it takes the money based on your monthly earnings.
06:19So, £28,470 a year is equivalent to £2,372 a month.
06:24You repay 9% of everything you earn above that a month.
06:27Let me give you an example and you'll see why so many have overpaid this.
06:31Here we go.
06:32So, there's the monthly repayment threshold.
06:35Let's imagine maybe you've just started after university and it's the next year or two.
06:38You've had a few months off. You didn't work in April. You didn't work in May.
06:42You didn't work in June. Then you got yourself a job paying £36,000 a year.
06:47£3,000 a month. Done. Because it's easy maths.
06:50In each of those months, you have to repay 9% of everything above the monthly threshold.
06:56Which is about a repayment of £56 a month each month for the remaining nine months.
07:02Do you understand why? OK. But, now look at this.
07:08Your total tax year earnings were £27,000. The annual threshold is £28,470.
07:16You earned less than the threshold. You don't have to repay your student loan.
07:21Here are the payments that you made. £508. You can reclaim the £508.
07:27So, this is big for many people. Who does it tend to most commonly affect?
07:32Well, it's those who only worked for part of the year, those who are on commission,
07:37or those who are on variable incomes. If your income is going up and down
07:40and you didn't turn over that amount in the tax work, you are able to reclaim.
07:44You use SLC Refund Request Form at gov.uk, or you can do it in your student loan company repayment app.
07:51You can do it for every year except the current tax year,
07:54because the current tax year, you'll have to wait till it finishes.
07:56So, every year before that, you can go and reclaim your money. Yes, Jeanette?
07:59Just before you move on, we've got a success story on this one,
08:02and it's a big one. Have a look at this. Exactly.
08:05Danielle lives in Loughborough with her husband and two kids.
08:09Being a maths teacher was the career that I always wanted.
08:13I needed to take the student loan to pay for it.
08:15After my initial £16,000, I borrowed.
08:18I also had to borrow another £9,000 to pay for my teacher training.
08:22I've watched the Martin Lewis show for almost seven years now.
08:26There was one show back in November.
08:28Martin mentioned there's over a million students that have overpaid their student loan.
08:32Is that me? Have I ever paid?
08:34He gave numerous reasons.
08:35The one that stood out to me was gaps in employment.
08:38In the last few years, I have had to give up my job when I had my eldest child.
08:42He was born with a brain condition and requires a lot of care.
08:45Once Martin shared that you could possibly have overpaid your student loan, I acted instantly.
08:51It was as simple as log on to your student finance, click manage your statements and click request refund.
08:58Within 48 hours of my application, I was told I got a refund of £2,213.
09:04It was a pinch me moment. I was seven months pregnant. I'm not working. I don't get an income.
09:09Having that money was really helpful. I'm so glad I went through the process.
09:14Thank you so much for doing that film.
09:19So look, she said a million people have overpaid. That was the previous tax year.
09:22This is an annual figure and it's still a million people overpaying each year,
09:25which is why it's a clarion call for me that if you are a graduate or university leaver
09:30who's paying your student loan to cheque, you haven't overpaid.
09:32Now, just before I move on, because we came in, there is one thing.
09:36This is a technicality and people ask me about this. It's a bit complex.
09:39If you overpaid in some months but aren't over the annual threshold,
09:43you cannot reclaim. So this is a negative. Let me explain that to you.
09:48So here's a scenario. Someone who earns £24,000 a year normally standard salary,
09:52so £2,000 a month below the threshold.
09:55We'll stick with Plan 2 again as an example here,
09:57but obviously from different plans the numbers are different.
09:59But then got a £5,000 bonus in December.
10:02So they've got a £5,000 bonus. Let's have a look. First of all,
10:05their total tax year earnings are £29,000 above the threshold, therefore.
10:11So they repaid 9% in this month of everything above £2,372.
10:18They repaid 400, just over £400.
10:21Now, what you might think is, hold on, they're only £500 above the annual threshold.
10:27They should be paying 9% of that, about 45 quid.
10:30But no, it's done by the month.
10:32They've repaid £400 of their student loan, even though they're only just above the threshold.
10:37And this is complicated, but effectively the rule is this.
10:40You repay your student loan by the month through PAYE,
10:45and that is correct unless your total annual earnings are below the threshold,
10:50and then you don't have to repay.
10:52If you think it seems unfair, that's because it's unfair,
10:54but that's the way the system works. Jeanette?
10:57Absolutely. I mean, I understood it, but you can move on. They're small.
11:01OK, good. You got it. Right, I've got more for you. Yes, you're right.
11:04Other reasons. Let's scroll up. There we go. I'll do these ones quickly.
11:08Reason to all much smaller, all in the tens of thousands, not over a million here.
11:11Wrong student loan repayment plan.
11:13If your employer doesn't know which plan you're on, it has to default to Plan 1,
11:16which is repayments above 26,000.
11:18But the biggest plan, Plan 2, and all the Scottish plans, Plan 4,
11:21the repayment threshold is higher.
11:23So you shouldn't be repaying as much. You should only be repaying above this amount,
11:26but you're repaying above that amount.
11:28If that's you, call the student loan company here for a refund. You can't do it online.
11:31Also, go and talk to your employer's payroll department and say,
11:34actually, this is my plan. Please change my setup so I'm paying on the right plan.
11:38Reason three. You started repaying the loan too early. Nearly 40,000 here.
11:43This is the rule. You only, regardless of what you earn,
11:46you only have to start qualifying to repay the student loan in the April
11:49after you leave university. For most graduates, that's nine months after they graduate,
11:54so you'd leave in the July the following April.
11:56But if your employer has the wrong details, it can take the money too soon.
11:59If that happens, you can get the money back by calling SLC for a refund.
12:03Good to have your payslips if you're doing that one.
12:05And the final reason, often get asked about this,
12:08is money is deducted after you've fully cleared the loan.
12:11So once you've paid off everything that you owe.
12:14Nearly 60,000 people last year. The loan's normally wiped after 30 years.
12:18It depends on the plan. Every plan is different, so you can look that up online.
12:21But the student loan company takes time to notify PAYE,
12:25so they don't always stop it on time.
12:27If that happens, you don't need to reclaim.
12:29You will be paid back automatically.
12:31My top tip, though, within the last two years of repaying your student loan,
12:36you can go online at student loan company and ask to set up a direct debit,
12:40so you pay it by direct debit, not through the payroll,
12:42and then you only pay the exact amount that you owed.
12:45And that is where we're finishing, I think, on student loan.
12:48One more. I know.
12:50I'm so sorry. There's one more question.
12:53Oh, go on. It's coming from... I'm sorry.
12:54It's coming from Amy.
12:56Amy says, I recently received a student loan refund of £1,601 overpaid.
13:00A proportion of that will have paid off interest.
13:03When I claim the refund, won't the amount just be added to my student loan?
13:06Absolutely. Very important question.
13:08Yes, 100%.
13:10If you've overpaid and you get the money back,
13:12then your student loan account, you will owe more.
13:15Now, what you may be thinking is, hold on,
13:17doesn't he normally say it's best to overpay loans
13:19because then you pay less interest?
13:21The quicker you pay a loan, the better.
13:22You are right on normal loans.
13:24Student loans are not normal loans.
13:27For example, those on those Plan 2 loans,
13:30the biggest one being repaid off at the moment,
13:32the stats show only around one in three people will clear what they borrowed
13:38plus interest in the 30 years before it wipes.
13:41Most people will just pay 9% of what they earn above the threshold for 30 years.
13:46So if you've overpaid and you take the money
13:49and you're one of those two thirds of people, lower to middle earners,
13:53well, you're still going to repay 9% of everything you earn over the threshold
13:57for the next 30 years.
13:58So taking that money back is not going to cost you any more in future.
14:00The money in your pocket is better in your pocket.
14:03Now, with other plans, you are more likely to clear earlier
14:06because the loan amount is lower and the interest rate is lower.
14:09But what I would still say then is if you need the money, say,
14:13to clear expensive debts or to reduce your mortgage borrowing,
14:16on the other plans, the interest rate is only 3.2%
14:19and student loans have better terms than any other form of borrowing.
14:22You only repair it if you're earning enough and it's going to wipe at some point.
14:25So in that case, you may still be better to take the money,
14:29have it in your pocket so you can use it so you don't have other more expensive debts.
14:32But especially those on the Plan 2 loans,
14:34the majority of people are better to take the money
14:37rather than just to reduce a loan that won't necessarily mean
14:39they pay any less in the future anyway.
14:41OK, now...
14:42Do you understand that? Because it's really complex.
14:44OK, I promise you're done now with that, I promise.
14:46Well, you can get in touch. Let us know about your student loan situation.
14:50Does this affect you? Always use that hashtag, Martin Lewis.
14:53But coming next, credit scoring. How does it work?
14:56And what is Experian about to do? We'll see you in four.
14:59Welcome back. We're live. We're going to be talking about credit scoring in a moment.
15:13But just before that, we're getting lots of reports
15:15that the student loan company website and app is struggling a bit,
15:18likely because of lots of demand. It's always what we do on this show.
15:21So be a bit patient, maybe check it in half an hour or an hour or so,
15:24and it should be easier.
15:25It should be. There's lots coming in over the break.
15:27I'm going to sort it all out and come back to it.
15:29But let's go to Jo in the studio. Jo, you've got a question for Martin.
15:32Hi, Martin. Hi. Hi.
15:34Yeah, I've heard that the credit agencies are changing the rules,
15:38but I don't understand how they actually work in the first place.
15:41Could you explain? I can.
15:43And they're not changing the rules, they're changing the score.
15:46Ah. And the first thing you all need to understand
15:48is the difference between your credit score and the credit scoring process.
15:53Don't worry. I'm going to explain in my big briefing.
15:58OK. The truth about credit scoring.
16:00The most important thing you all need to understand.
16:03You do not have a credit rating.
16:06You do not have a credit score in the UK.
16:09There is no single number that dictates acceptability.
16:13Each lender, when you apply, scores you differently
16:18based on its own individual profitability wish list.
16:23Profitability, not risk. Why do I say profitability?
16:26Well, in many cases it is, are you a good or bad risk?
16:29But it may be a company that's trying to target people who are a poor risk
16:32so it can charge them more.
16:33And for them, poor risk are profitable customers.
16:35So it's a profitability wish list, not a risk wish list.
16:39That's the...
16:41Nope.
16:42Yeah.
16:43I was expecting that, because this is what everyone says to me.
16:46But that's nonsense, Martin, because I have paid for my credit score,
16:49I know what my credit score is, I monitor my credit score very carefully
16:52and I do have a credit score.
16:54Is that what you were thinking?
16:56Yes.
16:57OK.
16:58Let me explain.
16:59Here you go.
17:00The big credit reference agencies, there are three of them,
17:03they will show you a credit score, capitalised,
17:06because that is your credit score, not the credit scoring process.
17:09But they are just their illustration of how a typical lender may view you.
17:16They are not used by lenders.
17:19Now, just to prove my point, TransUnion is out of 710.
17:23Equifax is out of 1,000.
17:26Experian is out of 999.
17:28But that's about to change, so it's out of 1,250.
17:31The fact they're all different tells you something.
17:33Just before I go on, let's explore that Experian change for a moment.
17:37Here's what's happening.
17:38It's rolling out new scores from mid-November till the end of the year.
17:41Some of you will have had notifications today on this particular one.
17:4444% of you will see your band drop.
17:47It might drop from excellent to very good.
17:4942% will get a higher score.
17:51Some may be in a higher band.
17:53But crucially, this shouldn't change anything.
17:56Why?
17:57Because this is just their illustration of how a typical lender views you.
18:02The underlying data is what the lenders use.
18:06Your underlying data hasn't changed.
18:09Therefore, your acceptance by lenders won't change.
18:13We are too hung up on this.
18:15Now, we have a man from Experian here, John Webb.
18:18Thank you for joining us.
18:19John, why are you doing this?
18:20So, what we've done is, as you've explained there,
18:22lenders are looking at the data on credit reports.
18:25We've added in more data into our credit score.
18:28Things like overpaying a mortgage, reducing your overdraft, taking cash from a credit card.
18:35These are the things that lenders are now looking at.
18:37We've included them into credit scores so we can give people the most accurate view of how a lender will view their credit report information when they apply.
18:45A typical lender but every lender does it differently.
18:48Why 1250, though?
18:49Why have you increased the number?
18:50I don't get that.
18:51I've heard your explanations.
18:52I still don't get it.
18:53So, we did consider staying at the same score.
18:56But, actually, the number one thing people tell us is that they want more information about how their credit score is calculated.
19:03By moving to the new range of up to 1250, it allows us to give people more detail than they've ever seen before about how their score is calculated and, more importantly, how to improve it.
19:13Because, typically, higher credit scores mean access to more affordable credit, better rates, better limits.
19:18You're obviously a cleverer man than me because I can't see how doing it out of 999 creating it to an arbitrary figure of 1250 when you could just proportion it makes any difference.
19:25But, hey, we'll move on.
19:26So, let me move on a little bit.
19:29Here we go.
19:30The biggest single thing you need to understand about credit scoring is the biggest piece of information they miss.
19:34The biggest thing that lenders look at is on your application form.
19:38It's your income.
19:39Lenders also do affordability scoring.
19:42That isn't in your credit score.
19:43Think about it.
19:44You've got the best credit score in the world.
19:46It's been brilliant.
19:47You've just lost your job.
19:48You've got no income.
19:49You can't afford to repay what you want to borrow.
19:51They are not going to lend to you.
19:53Credit scoring is not the end of the story at all.
19:56So, my big message to you.
19:58People get in touch with me and say, my credit score has just moved by seven points.
20:00What should I do?
20:02Don't sweat small moves in your credit score.
20:05It's just their illustration.
20:07But do sweat big ones that last longer because that's likely an indication there's something more systemic going wrong in your file.
20:15Kevin has emailed you just on this.
20:17Have a look at this.
20:18My energy supply did a hard search on my credit report, but I decided to switch instead of after getting a better deal within the cooling off period.
20:26Does this affect my credit score?
20:28Seems to have dropped a little.
20:29And what can I do?
20:30Well, yeah, it does affect your credit score, but who cares?
20:33Would be my honest answer.
20:34I've got more detail on that, though, because this is what you need to consider.
20:37So, we'll just break it down.
20:39What you've got there is a new credit account or an application or maybe a cash withdrawal on a credit card.
20:46What happens then?
20:47You'll get a small score dip, but it'll only last for up to about three months.
20:50And then it'll go back to normal.
20:51It bounced back.
20:52Don't worry.
20:53I mean, listen, it always depends on circumstance, but this is sort of guidance. Scale of magnitude.
20:58If you've been applying for lots of accounts in a short space of time, that is a more significant problem.
21:03You'll see a bigger drop in your score.
21:05It'll probably start reducing after three months, and then it should be gone after six months as long as you don't do any more.
21:11If you've missed the payment, we're starting to get onto this side now is the real problem side.
21:16You'll have a much bigger drop.
21:18It'll often go on for six months after it has been fixed.
21:21So you have to make sure you make the payment and it's only improved if you're paying on time afterwards or it could be even worse.
21:27Now, if you have an arrear where you are owing money to a lender, that is significantly damaging.
21:33It can take two years to recover from and only if you manage to make it up to then.
21:37And then the really bad stuff, the stuff that is going to cause you problems with all lenders, if you have a default, a county court judgment and insolvency.
21:46Bankruptcy, IVA equivalent.
21:48It is very significantly damaging.
21:51It can impact your score for up to six years or possibly longer.
21:54Now, I'm talking here about the credit score that the credit reference agencies give you, but that is roughly symbolic of the way that most lenders would think too.
22:02So it's both the impact and the time span of the impact that matters.
22:05In the case of that question, they've gone in a few months.
22:08OK. How about this one from Sandra?
22:10She's asking, my son has a phone contract in my name.
22:13He recently had a late payment on the account, which is showing on my credit report.
22:17Do you have any advice?
22:18Well, just being... I need to make this blunt and I don't mean to be rude, Sandra.
22:23You have a phone contract you're letting your son use.
22:26Therefore, the debt is yours. It's on your credit file of yours.
22:29Whatever your relationship between the son.
22:31When you give somebody else money in your name, it's you that owe it.
22:35The first thing you need to do is make sure you're paid and pay on time in future.
22:40There's very little you're going to be able to do about it.
22:43The truth is it's representing a real thing that's happened.
22:46It hasn't been paid. That's gone onto your credit file.
22:48It will have a negative effect. That's what credit scoring is all about.
22:52So you need to just protect yourself in future.
22:54We can't tidy up things that are real.
22:56We can learn how to correct errors that shouldn't be on your file.
22:59Let's just ask John, anything else you can think of that I've not said?
23:01No, it's exactly right. It's her account, her contract.
23:05So actually, she's responsible for paying or showing up on her file.
23:08Bring it up to date as soon as possible and keep paying on time.
23:11And like you said, it will improve.
23:12It will improve. Within six months, it will start to get better.
23:15And in two years, it should mostly be gone.
23:17But let me get on to the most important thing you need to do when it comes to credit.
23:22It's not your credit score. It's your credit file.
23:25Also called your credit report.
23:27You should check your file at least annually and definitely before any major application you're going to make.
23:32Because if there's an error that stops you getting one, you've got too many applications on your file
23:36and you can start to go into a vicious circle.
23:38So your credit file will list key information, the products you have,
23:41whether you've paid on time or any county court judgments against you,
23:44the electoral roll information.
23:46I want you to go through this line by line.
23:48Be a pedant.
23:50Be pedantic and I will give you a tick.
23:52Because even a small address error on an open account could block you in fraud scoring.
24:00Line by line.
24:02Now, for a general check, I would just do one agency.
24:05But if you're about to do a big application by that, I really mean a mortgage.
24:08I would check all three agencies because you don't know which one they're using.
24:11And one, if there is an error, they will pass it on to the others.
24:13It's safer to do it that way.
24:15You can see your files for free.
24:16You can use the statutory credit reports, which tend to be a bit slower or these ways are a bit quicker.
24:20For Equifax, Equifax Basic or ClearScore will give you a free report.
24:24For Experian, go to the free Experian app. Relatively new that.
24:27For TransUnion, loads of bank websites and many credit help apps will also give you a TransUnion report.
24:34Big warning, though, loads of them will try and sign you up to this.
24:37£15 a month, credit monitoring service, everything you need.
24:40You don't need that to see your credit report and it's your credit report that really matters.
24:43So don't accidentally sign up for that if you don't need to.
24:46Final thought, we've been talking about student loans already.
24:49Student loan company loans do not go on your credit file.
24:53That isn't to say they can't affect your applications, but they don't affect it as debt.
24:59What they effectively do is they reduce your disposable income if you're paying off,
25:03if you're above that threshold and you're paying off the 9%.
25:06So it's a bit like you earn less and that can still lead to rejections or getting worse products,
25:10but it's not because it's a debt on your credit file.
25:12It's just because you have lower disposable income, if that makes sense.
25:15Absolutely. We've got a virtual wall this evening.
25:18Jane is here. Jane, you've got a question for Martin. Good evening, Jane.
25:22Hi, Martin. My question is, he used to have a good credit rating of about 750.
25:31After we manually underpaid by 55p, one bank loan instalment,
25:38the bank then incorrectly reported to the credit reference agency that we had missed six hold payments.
25:46Didn't find this out until earlier on this year when I had to check his credit file for something.
25:52We contacted the bank. The bank admitted they'd made an error.
25:56They've corrected the file now, but it's not really improved his credit score.
26:00It's gone from 277, which is what it dropped to now, to 377.
26:05And you are absolutely sure that they have corrected it on the credit file,
26:09that that information is right, and it's the same credit file that is of the report that you're looking at.
26:15Yeah. Well, that's a tough one. Luckily, I've got John here. John.
26:18Thank you. That is a tough one. So, yeah, my first instinct would be to say,
26:23check all credit reports with the three credit reference agencies, make sure it's correct.
26:28It sounds a bit like they maybe haven't updated the credit reference agencies with the right information,
26:34but if that's the case, if it is correct, there might be other factors that are influencing the credit score.
26:40So, go through your credit report, have a look, see if there's something else that's interesting.
26:43How recently was this? How recent was it?
26:46Right. So, we found out in September, contacted the bank. The bank admitted their mistake.
26:52I think this could literally... Sorry, they're telling me to go to break.
26:55I think this could literally be that they've just not updated it in time.
26:59Keep monitoring over the next month to six weeks.
27:01If it hasn't worked, you apply to have a notification on your file,
27:05a notice of correction put on your file where you write that this was a mistake
27:09and hasn't really happened. You write back to the bank
27:11and you put in a dispute with the credit reference agency
27:13that something is going wrong and you want it fixed.
27:16And you absolutely have a right to do that.
27:18But I suspect some just don't update that quickly
27:20and it's probably just an updating issue and it will fix itself.
27:23It should fix itself, shouldn't it? Yeah, they update every month.
27:26Go to break, go to break, go to break. Thank you very much.
27:30OK, well, coming up, we're going to be talking about what actually happens
27:33when you apply for Credit Plus.
27:35Martin, you're taking us to your credit pub? My credit pub indeed.
27:39You will find out more. I'll have some water. OK, we'll see you after this.
27:42CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
27:54Welcome back to our credit scoring special.
27:56We've got this question that's coming from Lainey.
27:58Just for you, Martin.
27:59I have a clear score, credit score, of 1,000,
28:02but I can't get a 0% balance transfer card
28:05to help me clear my credit card debts.
28:07I keep getting refused. Why could this be?
28:10Well, I'm hoping you've started to work out why.
28:12Let's go straight back into the big briefing now.
28:14Well, Lainey, I'd written it there.
28:16What happens when you apply?
28:18You can still be rejected, Lainey, with a perfect credit score.
28:21Firms use information from your credit file,
28:23but they also use information from your application form,
28:26including that all-important income
28:28and any past dealings they've had with you.
28:30So if it's a bank that maybe you've had good dealings with,
28:33it might be more helpful.
28:34If it's a bank you've not had good dealings with,
28:36it might be more likely to reject than others.
28:38But remember, lenders' affordability score 2,
28:43which is just as important.
28:45Let me delve into that into a little bit more detail with you now.
28:48Here we go.
28:49So this is just to give you an example
28:52of the type of things that's going on.
28:53I'm not going to labour it too much
28:54because every lender will work slightly differently.
28:56Here's some of the type of things they will look at.
28:58Remember, it involves your income.
28:59You'll see how much of this does.
29:01First, your debt ratio.
29:02How much unsecured debt, loans, credit cards, overdrafts,
29:06not mortgages, not student loans,
29:08do you have as a percentage of your annual income?
29:10You've got £20,000 on credit cards.
29:12You earn £40,000.
29:14That's 50%, and it uses this scale.
29:17There you go.
29:18That's OK.
29:19It's not good.
29:20It's a bit of a problem.
29:21What do you do?
29:22Well, try and reduce your debt,
29:23or of course try and improve your income,
29:24which may be a bit more difficult.
29:26The next one, credit utilisation.
29:28This is the amount of the available credit you have that you are using.
29:32It works on the same scale as the other.
29:34So £100 debt on a credit card with £1,000 credit limit is 10% credit utilisation.
29:39But it's looking across all of your debts.
29:41Now, the really important thing here is when this is used,
29:45it only really matters if you have a high debt ratio.
29:48If you've got a lot of debt, this matters.
29:49If you've only got a tiny bit of debt,
29:50the fact you're using all of it isn't that relevant
29:52if it's only a small proportion of your income.
29:54Again, you try and reduce your card or overdraft debt,
29:57or mathematically, you try and get more credit.
30:00But that causes you problems in other forms of credit scoring,
30:02so I probably wouldn't bother with that.
30:03That's the second thing they look at.
30:05And the third is your disposable income.
30:07The spare cash each month after bills and essentials.
30:10Now, with cards, loans and mortgages,
30:13actually, they're mostly doing a statistical estimate.
30:16They look at what your main outgoings are,
30:18but for your spending, they're not really looking at your spending.
30:20They're looking at what somebody in your position
30:22would statistically be likely to spend,
30:24so you can't impact it that much.
30:26But it's still worth, before a mortgage application,
30:28just being careful and going frugal.
30:30So you're starting to see how much more complicated
30:32than the pure credit score this is.
30:34And we get more.
30:35For credit card acceptance,
30:37because your acceptance tends to be on your credit score.
30:40Will I get accepted or not?
30:42The affordability score dictates your credit limit.
30:44How much will you be able to borrow on the card?
30:46Because it's a variable credit limit.
30:48Acceptance is binary, this is variable.
30:50With a loan, it's more weighted to affordability score.
30:53This is why, think about this, this really explains everything.
30:57You are one person, you apply to one lender,
31:00they accept you for a £3,000 loan,
31:02they reject you for a £10,000 loan.
31:04You've got the same credit score, everything else is the same.
31:07It's not about your credit score,
31:08it's about your affordability score.
31:10Mortgage acceptance, again,
31:12more weighted towards affordability scoring.
31:15Now, one of the things going on there
31:17is probably over-application.
31:19You've applied too many times and that can be dangerous.
31:22Applying can mark your credit file,
31:24even if you don't get accepted.
31:26So if possible, don't apply.
31:28Go on to an eligibility comparison on a comparison site.
31:33That avoids heart searches and it shows you
31:35your likely odds of acceptance for different cards.
31:38Then you can home in on the best card.
31:40Crucially, these use soft searches.
31:42So you see these searches on your file,
31:44lenders can't factor them in, so they're safe to do.
31:47I suspect you've been over-applying.
31:49Go and do an eligibility calculator.
31:51If your score's low, give it six weeks or so.
31:53And then try again and hopefully...
31:55Or even three months and then things may have softened.
31:57Anything else? Are we good?
31:58Exactly right.
31:59Take a break from applying for about three months
32:01and then use the eligibility check.
32:03OK, there we go. We both agree. Cool.
32:04OK, there's this that's coming as well from Stephen.
32:07He's asking, I've got an excellent credit score,
32:09but I want to change to an interest-free balance transfer card.
32:13Will my credit score go down?
32:15Who cares?
32:16Stephen, I genuinely don't care.
32:18For a very simple reason.
32:20First of all, it's only your credit score.
32:21It's only an illustration.
32:22But more importantly,
32:23I tend to think of managing your credit worthiness like saving.
32:27I'm saving up for a rainy day in case I need it.
32:30What is the most important use of your credit score?
32:32To cut the cost of existing debt,
32:34which is what a balance transfer is.
32:36So use it.
32:37It is far better to have a lower credit score
32:40and better finances and cheaper debt
32:42than a good credit score
32:43and you're paying over the odds.
32:44That's what you're building your credit score for.
32:46If your credit score goes down, it goes down.
32:48You've got a card that cuts the cost of your debts.
32:50Hurrah!
32:51Thanks, Stephen.
32:54Sorry, Mayim.
32:55Right.
32:56This is coming from Ahmed.
32:57I think quite an important question.
32:58What's the safest checklist
32:59to build a strong credit history from 18?
33:02Can I have me pub?
33:04Bring me pub.
33:06Now, it's the borrower's return, everybody.
33:11And is it Anne?
33:12Anne volunteered in the break
33:14that she's going to come and sit in my pub.
33:16Come up the stairs, my love.
33:17There we go.
33:18Just wait until we don't need to get hurt.
33:19If you go and sit over there.
33:23This is the prop.
33:24Do not drink it.
33:25It might poison you.
33:26OK.
33:27So this, I just want so people understand how this works.
33:30We're going to play a game.
33:31You're in a pub.
33:32This is what happens.
33:33You're sitting there.
33:35Ooh!
33:36Anne, how are you?
33:37Oh, it's lovely to see you.
33:39I forgot my wallet.
33:41Oh, I'm so sorry.
33:43Could you lend me 20 quid and I'll give it you back tomorrow
33:47and I'll buy you a pint as well.
33:48Now, I have done this about 40 times before
33:53and every single time I have done it, I have always paid back the next day
33:58and I have always bought a pint on top.
34:00Would you lend me 20 quid?
34:01Because it's you, Martin.
34:02I would.
34:03No, but even if it wasn't me.
34:04No, probably not.
34:05Oh, well.
34:06I'm a fan.
34:07There's always one.
34:08Yes, I would.
34:09Oh, I'm very glad you said that.
34:10Next example.
34:11Here we go.
34:12Anne, how are you?
34:13Great, thank you.
34:14Oh, no, I forgot my wallet.
34:15Tell you what.
34:16Could you lend me 20 quid and I'll give it you back tomorrow
34:17and I'll buy you a pint as well.
34:18Now, this would you lend me 20 quid?
34:19Would you lend me 20 quid and I'll give it you back tomorrow
34:21and I'll buy you a pint as well.
34:22Now, this would you lend me 20 quid?
34:24Would you lend me 20 quid?
34:26Because it's you, Martin, I would.
34:27No quid and I'll give it you back tomorrow and I'll buy you a pint as well.
34:30Now, this person has done this 30 times before,
34:34always forgets to pay back the next day,
34:36never buys the pint on top and always has to be chased to give the money.
34:39Would you lend it to them?
34:41If their name was Martin Lewis, yes, but no otherwise.
34:46No one else, so you're not giving it. Good.
34:48No.
34:49Final one.
34:51She's hard work.
34:53Simple example.
34:55Hi.
34:59Hi.
35:00Nice to meet you.
35:02Oh, no.
35:03I forgot my wallet.
35:04Would you lend me 20 quid and I'll buy you a pint tomorrow?
35:07You have never met this person before in your life.
35:10You do not know who they are.
35:11It's not Martin Lewis.
35:13Would you lend to them?
35:15No.
35:16No.
35:17OK.
35:18This is credit scoring.
35:19First example has a good credit history.
35:20We know that they're repaid.
35:21We can predict their future behaviour based on their past.
35:23They're a pretty safe bet.
35:24Second person, we predict their future behaviour based on their past.
35:27They're not a safe bet.
35:28Third person may be lovely, but you don't know them.
35:31You have no data.
35:32No data gets rejection.
35:33That's how credit scoring works.
35:35And if you'd like to go back there before they move the put away,
35:37thank you very much for that, everybody.
35:39I know we're on the wrong channel.
35:42Get my pub ab here.
35:44OK.
35:45Thanks, chaps.
35:46Well, they do that.
35:48Two biggest reasons people are rejected.
35:51Your past behaviour and they don't have enough data.
35:54How do you build data?
35:55You need credit to get credit, but how do you get credit when you don't have it?
36:01You get what's called a build or a rebuild credit card.
36:04Easy to get.
36:05They have high interest.
36:06Go on to an eligibility calculator for a rebuild card.
36:09If you can get them, there are a couple that give spending rewards.
36:11Tesco Foundation card, Asda money, terrible interest rates.
36:14Here's how you use them.
36:15At no cost.
36:16Spend 50 to 100 quid a month on them.
36:18Just your normal spending.
36:19Don't spend anything that you wouldn't spend.
36:20Pay it off.
36:21In full.
36:22In full.
36:23In full.
36:24Preferably by direct debit.
36:25Never miss repayments.
36:27Never withdraw cash.
36:28That's always bad.
36:29Never bust your credit limit.
36:30After a year or so, with no other issues, your credit worthiness should improve.
36:34My problem with an 18-year-old, only do it with an 18-year-old who's trusted and will
36:39do this sensibly and not realise it's just free money.
36:41Just know it's a way to build their credit score.
36:43You could even do it with two cards.
36:45And don't use credit rebuild the schemes.
36:47Can you tell again they're going, go to break, go to break?
36:50But hopefully that makes sense.
36:51Get yourself a credit, but use it carefully.
36:54Never overspend.
36:55Pay it off in full.
36:56Absolutely.
36:57Thank you very much, Martin.
36:58Now, coming up next, 10 ways to be financially fit and the rest of news you can use, including
37:03half-priced Christmas trees.
37:16Well, welcome back to the show.
37:18We are loving this credit score special.
37:21But Martin, what I want to know, how do you actually boost your credit worthiness?
37:24That's what we want to know.
37:26Well, the honest truth about this is, I don't know if I can use this phrase, but it's what
37:29we called it when I was growing up.
37:31It's a bit like going on the pool.
37:33Financially.
37:34You all right, Anne?
37:35So, the truth about going on the pool is there's lots you can do to make yourself look better,
37:41but different people are attracted to different things, so there's no perfect solution.
37:46But what I've got here is 10 tips to make you financially fitter and more fanciable.
37:53LAUGHTER
37:56Here we are.
37:57So, the first one, use consistent answers on every application.
38:01Now, what do I mean by that?
38:02First of all, they like stability, but more importantly, if you get it wrong, you can be
38:05triggered out of fraud scoring.
38:06So, if you could be a marketing assistant or a promotions assistant, don't vary the term.
38:12Use the same term every time.
38:13If you've got more than one mobile, use the same mobile on every application.
38:17Of course, if your job changes, then you change what you put in, but stability is important.
38:21Next, get on the electoral roll if you want.
38:23It's a big problem for credit scoring if you're not.
38:25You can still opt out of the open register.
38:27That's the thing that stops you getting junk mail.
38:29Opt out of the open register to not get junk mail.
38:31Foreign national, then you can ask for a notice of correction and that can prove your residency and help.
38:36Yes?
38:37Yes.
38:38Yes.
38:39Right.
38:40Finally, you can snog or marry who you like.
38:42You have my permission.
38:43Financially.
38:44That will not affect your credit.
38:46What will a joint product?
38:49Mortgage, loan, bank accounts.
38:51No such thing as a joint credit card.
38:52It's a second card holder.
38:53If you even apply, not have, but you apply for a joint product, that can financially link you.
38:59That means they can look at the other person's file when you're applying for credit.
39:05So, if they've got a bad credit history, this could kibosh your applications.
39:08Be very, very careful before getting joint products.
39:11By the way, if you were jointly, had joint products with someone,
39:14and you're no longer financially linked to them,
39:16then you apply for a notice of disassociation to all the credit reference agencies,
39:21but you have to be generally financially separate.
39:24Next one.
39:25Fascinating, this one.
39:26The first time I've said this.
39:27Overpaying your mortgage may start to boost your credit worthiness.
39:30Check you shouldn't be saving.
39:31Go to a mortgage overpayment calculator to check.
39:33This is because Experian, the biggest reference for Regist Agency, is adding it in its credit score,
39:38and they advise companies on how they should do their own credit scoring,
39:41so we're likely to see more of it coming in the future, overpaying your mortgage.
39:45Carrying on, let's get to more.
39:47Never miss or be late on repayments.
39:49That is so important.
39:50If you're not good, but you want to pay variable amounts,
39:53well, at least set up a direct debit to pay the minimum each month,
39:56and you can manually overpay on top, but at least that way you will never miss a repayment.
40:02Buy now, pay later is increasingly appearing on credit reports.
40:06Klarna and Zilch already report.
40:08The rest are likely to start doing so once regulation starts in the middle of next year.
40:13It might not feel like a debt, but buy now, pay later is a debt.
40:18So, if you pay it off on time, it can be positive.
40:22If you miss payments, it can be negative for your credit file.
40:25Not for credit files, it doesn't go on your credit score,
40:27but it can be negative for lenders, can see it negatively.
40:30An overuse of it could be a danger sign, so think of it as a debt.
40:34Don't withdraw cash on credit cards, always a bad thing to do.
40:37It's expensive, and if you do it a lot, it can be seen as poor money management.
40:40I know some of you are saying, but I do it abroad.
40:42If you're doing it one-off abroad because you've got a specialist overseas card,
40:45that's not so bad.
40:46It'll disappear off your file in a few months, the score lower.
40:48But be careful with that one.
40:50Time application's right.
40:52I talked earlier about the impact on your credit score,
40:54but actually some things only last on your credit file for a set time.
40:58The bad stuff, CCJs, defaults, finished bankruptcy, stay for six years.
41:02Applications only for one year.
41:04So if something's just about to lapse, wait a week till it's gone before you do your application.
41:08Makes sense, doesn't it?
41:10Now, one I'm asked about all the time.
41:12Logically, if I pay £1,500 a month in rent, that should be a good indication that I can afford to pay £1,500 of mortgage, shouldn't it?
41:22It should. It doesn't work like that. It should.
41:26But it's starting to be changed.
41:28There are ways you can apply to have paying rent on time factored into your credit score,
41:33which could, of course, improve your mortgage acceptability in future.
41:38So if you're a tenant, you can sign up to Canopy, which reports to the Experian credit file for free.
41:44You could sign up to Credit Ladder, which will report to one agency for free.
41:48So using those two in conjunction, you can get two of the three agencies.
41:52If you want all three of the agencies, you can pay Credit Ladder £60 a year,
41:57and you'll get it to report to all three of the credit reference agencies.
42:01Clearly great if you pay your rent on time.
42:04Clearly not good for you if you miss or are late paying rents. Makes sense.
42:08Also worth noting, some big landlords, social housing landlords with over 500 properties,
42:15have the Experian Rental Exchange Initiative.
42:18They should have told you about it.
42:19That means they're reporting to credit files, but you could choose to opt out, for example, if you wanted.
42:23If you're paying rent on time, I wouldn't.
42:24And my final one, don't do little applications before a big one.
42:29If you want a credit reward card, but you're about to apply for a mortgage,
42:34do it after the mortgage application.
42:36The mortgage application is what matters.
42:38Applications do impact your credit worthiness,
42:41so put things in the right order when you're applying.
42:44And those together is how to be financially fitter and more fanciable,
42:48how you doing.
42:49LAUGHTER
42:51APPLAUSE
42:52OK.
42:53You have got time for some quick news you can use.
42:56Okey-doke.
43:00Right.
43:01Time for some quickies.
43:03First of all, state-owned bank, or financial institution,
43:06NS&I has boosted its British Savings Bond rates.
43:08You can see them there.
43:09They're all over 4%.
43:10Now, these are just fixed-rate savings by another name.
43:12Let's not get over-complicated.
43:14The rate is good.
43:15It's not top.
43:16It's about 0.2 percentage points, or 0.3 percentage points,
43:20behind the very top open-market fixed-rate payer.
43:23But many people want a big name with their savings.
43:26NS&I is as big as it gets.
43:28And crucially, most savings are protected up to £85,000 per person
43:33per financial institution by the state.
43:35This is owned by the state, so every penny in there,
43:38even if it's more than that, is protected.
43:40So it's a good option for those with very large amounts.
43:42Maybe you sold your house seven months ago
43:44and you want to know what to do with the money.
43:46Next, a heads-up.
43:47You can get £10 to £60 West End theatre tickets
43:50if you've got a MasterCard.
43:51Starts next Tuesday, 10am.
43:53I'm doing it now because sun shows sell out quickly,
43:55so you want to be on at the exact moment.
43:57It's the official London Theatre New Year sale.
44:00First dibs for those people who got a MasterCard
44:02on 2026 performances, including Wicked, The Devil's Wears Prada,
44:06Back to the Future, The Producers, and six...
44:09That was just for my daughter, by the way.
44:12If you're watching, I love you.
44:14From tomorrow, Ryanair won't accept home-printed boarding passes.
44:18You must check in online or Varex out first.
44:20If not, you'll be charged up to £55.
44:22But if you have checked in online
44:24and your phone ran out of battery,
44:26they're no longer going to charge the £20
44:28for printing a boarding pass at the airport.
44:29You can now do that for free.
44:30So in some ways, it's a win for some people.
44:32And then from Thursday,
44:34you can get 50% off three Christmas trees at Tesco.
44:38The club card holds us only in-store.
44:40There's a six-foot Nordmann fur.
44:42These are all real trees, 20 quid.
44:44So half 40 down to 20.
44:45Three-and-a-half-foot potty tree for 15 quid.
44:47Or a four-foot tree with lights for 20 quid.
44:49And while we're speaking about Christmas,
44:51next Tuesday is the big one.
44:55We do it every year.
44:56Big audience, festive forecast,
44:58the Black Friday special, Christmas deals.
45:00It's all coming in.
45:02I'm even going to have to sing at the start of the show
45:04because that has sadly become a tradition too.
45:06It's all going on.
45:08So do not miss it.
45:09Set your diary eight o'clock next Tuesday
45:11and have a pen and pencil or some note-taking with you
45:13because at the end, I'm running through all those deals
45:15and I'm going to be running through them
45:16at serious speed, Jeannette.
45:18Well, there you go.
45:20I've got one question for you.
45:23How is your voice doing?
45:24My voice is all right now, but you know I can't speak out
45:26when I've done the festive forecast that we'll go through next week.
45:28Ladies and gentlemen, thank you so much.
45:29You've got questions about Christmas deals
45:31or free cash from bank switching or children's savings?
45:33I'll be covering them all next week.
45:35Use the hashtag Martin Lewis.
45:36Any questions on what we've done today,
45:37get in touch with that as well.
45:38Jeanette, you've been wonderful.
45:39The audience here has been wonderful.
45:41A round of applause for John Webb and Anne.
45:47And you know what?
45:48If I drank, I'd say I'd be off to my pub now,
45:51but I don't really, so I'll just go and pretend afterwards anyway.
45:53That's it.
45:54Take care, everybody.
45:55Good night.
45:56Good night!
45:57CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
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