angrysaveruk
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Say No To T.D.S
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Post by angrysaveruk on Dec 13, 2022 13:20:56 GMT
Following my latest run in with Santander which involved my account being frozen for well over a week and being offered compensation after they admitted they had over stepped the mark this time I have switched to HSBC for which I was paid £200 for 5 minutes work. This has made me think that keeping 2 or 3 current accounts with direct debits linked to each and then cycling them about when offers to switch arise might be a good way of earning some free money. However, I am thinking that the banks are probably wise to this strategy and keep a record of people who hop current accounts like this. Does anyone know if banks monitor this?
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dead-money
Rocket to the Moon
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Post by dead-money on Dec 13, 2022 13:46:27 GMT
Yes, most switching offers will have a no repeat within X number of years condition.
i.e. you can't now benefit from another HSBC or First Direct switching offer until after 2025.
NB It's best to open the sacrifical accounts with banks which don't tend to offer switching bonuses, i.e. Monzo, Starling, etc.
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eeyore
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Post by eeyore on Dec 13, 2022 13:47:12 GMT
If you're seriously interested in exploiting this source of "free money" then I can recommend looking at the banking section of the MSE forum here: forums.moneysavingexpert.com/categories/budgeting-bank-accountsThere are several banks currently offering incentives to switch, the only hitch is that customers who have received an incentive from that bank in the past won't get another incentive! Edit: crossed with dead-money's post. Once I identify a switching offer, I closely check the terms & conditions of the offer for the exclusions - an exclusion date for previous incentives is usually present - then it's a process of trying to remember when my last incentive from XYZ Bank was received! And to answer the specific question you asked about banks monitoring switching: Yes, a bank will keep a record of incentives each customer has received but it's unlikely that there's a data-base somewhere recording incentives any customer has received from another bank, other than the credit agencies recording the opening of new current accounts. I've exploited these switching offers from many banks over the last decade or so - I've never been refused.
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benaj
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Post by benaj on Dec 13, 2022 15:25:48 GMT
Yes having multiple current accounts with one bank is good idea. For example, you can easily increase your cash withdrawal limit with multiple debit cards.
Banks keep records for sure. In the case of Santander, I switched to them this September for bonus and the first time I logged on Santander and I could see my log in details from 2016!
The bottom line, it's okay to close any current account but it may be easier to keep at least any account with any bank for future switch.
Banks like Natwest gives bonus from switching current accounts from other bank even if you are existing account holder.
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Post by df on Dec 13, 2022 18:42:17 GMT
Following my latest run in with Santander which involved my account being frozen for well over a week and being offered compensation after they admitted they had over stepped the mark this time I have switched to HSBC for which I was paid £200 for 5 minutes work. This has made me think that keeping 2 or 3 current accounts with direct debits linked to each and then cycling them about when offers to switch arise might be a good way of earning some free money. However, I am thinking that the banks are probably wise to this strategy and keep a record of people who hop current accounts like this. Does anyone know if banks monitor this? I don't think they do. I take advantage of switch offers whenever they are available and managed to switch back to the banks I've switch out of before. I always make sure I have enough accounts opened for switch opportunities, majority of them have £0 balance.
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angrysaveruk
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Say No To T.D.S
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Post by angrysaveruk on Dec 13, 2022 19:23:20 GMT
Following my latest run in with Santander which involved my account being frozen for well over a week and being offered compensation after they admitted they had over stepped the mark this time I have switched to HSBC for which I was paid £200 for 5 minutes work. This has made me think that keeping 2 or 3 current accounts with direct debits linked to each and then cycling them about when offers to switch arise might be a good way of earning some free money. However, I am thinking that the banks are probably wise to this strategy and keep a record of people who hop current accounts like this. Does anyone know if banks monitor this? I don't think they do. I take advantage of switch offers whenever they are available and managed to switch back to the banks I've switch out of before. I always make sure I have enough accounts opened for switch opportunities, majority of them have £0 balance.
I guess the marketing departments who offer these things only care about how many "New Customers" they can put on their Powerpoint presentation to justify their existance. Whether these are real customers or people gaming the system doesnt matter.
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Post by df on Dec 13, 2022 20:47:58 GMT
I don't think they do. I take advantage of switch offers whenever they are available and managed to switch back to the banks I've switch out of before. I always make sure I have enough accounts opened for switch opportunities, majority of them have £0 balance.
I guess the marketing departments who offer these things only care about how many "New Customers" they can put on their Powerpoint presentation to justify their existance. Whether these are real customers or people gaming the system doesnt matter.
Probably not so much for power presentation, but for the custom. A lot of people go overdraft, buy insurance, foreign currency (holiday money), take loans, mortgages etc. I don't know for sure, but I think we are the tiny minority that don't really matter on the scale banks make profit from these offers.
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zlb
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Post by zlb on Jan 2, 2023 19:48:58 GMT
Doubt there's enough people who are happy to faff around with this for banks or BSs to care.
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aju
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Post by aju on Jan 3, 2023 12:54:01 GMT
Doubt there's enough people who are happy to faff around with this for banks or BSs to care. Lets hope not as we have quite a few more accounts than we are supposed to across quite a number of banks. Virgin money springs to mind as their rules were changed recently due to internal consolidations but they still don't seem to be policed as yet - fingers crossed. We used to have the 6 x £5 halifax deal for a number of years until very recently where there are now better rates elsewhere for the cost of the accounts so we closed them after making > £3000 on them for quite a number of years before closing them. They recently reopened the process but we stopped it as better rates appeared elsewhere too. Mrs aju complains as to why we have so many accounts all mostly automated using back and forth processes between each other. The spreads are quite large now so i recently got rid of the lower rates and concentrated on the better ones. Mrs aju will become a fully fledged pensioner this year and will then be paying tax so we are probably going to have to change our strategy a bit to accommodate the tax issues with the higher rates. The biggest problem with mainstream ISA's is the way that are creaming off the tax benefits with lower rates.
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Post by df on Jan 3, 2023 15:54:55 GMT
Doubt there's enough people who are happy to faff around with this for banks or BSs to care. Lets hope not as we have quite a few more accounts than we are supposed to across quite a number of banks. Virgin money springs to mind as their rules were changed recently due to internal consolidations but they still don't seem to be policed as yet - fingers crossed. We used to have the 6 x £5 halifax deal for a number of years until very recently where there are now better rates elsewhere for the cost of the accounts so we closed them after making > £3000 on them for quite a number of years before closing them. They recently reopened the process but we stopped it as better rates appeared elsewhere too.Mrs aju complains as to why we have so many accounts all mostly automated using back and forth processes between each other. The spreads are quite large now so i recently got rid of the lower rates and concentrated on the better ones. Mrs aju will become a fully fledged pensioner this year and will then be paying tax so we are probably going to have to change our strategy a bit to accommodate the tax issues with the higher rates. The biggest problem with mainstream ISA's is the way that are creaming off the tax benefits with lower rates. I always empty them and keep for swithching.
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aju
Member of DD Central
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Post by aju on Jan 3, 2023 16:47:20 GMT
Lets hope not as we have quite a few more accounts than we are supposed to across quite a number of banks. Virgin money springs to mind as their rules were changed recently due to internal consolidations but they still don't seem to be policed as yet - fingers crossed. We used to have the 6 x £5 halifax deal for a number of years until very recently where there are now better rates elsewhere for the cost of the accounts so we closed them after making > £3000 on them for quite a number of years before closing them. They recently reopened the process but we stopped it as better rates appeared elsewhere too.Mrs aju complains as to why we have so many accounts all mostly automated using back and forth processes between each other. The spreads are quite large now so i recently got rid of the lower rates and concentrated on the better ones. Mrs aju will become a fully fledged pensioner this year and will then be paying tax so we are probably going to have to change our strategy a bit to accommodate the tax issues with the higher rates. The biggest problem with mainstream ISA's is the way that are creaming off the tax benefits with lower rates. I always empty them and keep for swithching. My bad English when i said closing them i meant we kept the accounts on but they just have £1 each in them for similar reasons as one never knows whats coming down the track. The old 3 each ones were used a while back we now just had 1 each but have not found anything to move them to as yet.
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angrysaveruk
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Say No To T.D.S
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Post by angrysaveruk on Jan 3, 2023 18:04:12 GMT
Doubt there's enough people who are happy to faff around with this for banks or BSs to care.
There will always be people who cant resist free money...
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qlassa
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Post by qlassa on Jan 18, 2023 22:05:41 GMT
Doubt there's enough people who are happy to faff around with this for banks or BSs to care.
There will always be people who cant resist free money...
Was doing it few years back.. not really free money because it will impact credit score if doing that too frequent..
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Post by df on Jan 19, 2023 11:40:04 GMT
There will always be people who cant resist free money...
Was doing it few years back.. not really free money because it will impact credit score if doing that too frequent.. I wish I could do it more frequently, but there are only about 12 banks who offer free cash for switching/opening account and many of them don't allow to be used more than once.
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jontyab
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Post by jontyab on Jan 19, 2023 13:34:48 GMT
Was doing it few years back.. not really free money because it will impact credit score if doing that too frequent.. I might think you could minimise the impact on credit history by not requesting credit (an overdraft!), but I can't say I paid much attention to my credit scores the last time I did the CASS rounds.
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