|       |       |  |       | These blockbuster deals from BT & Sky   are so cheap thanks to massive cashback 
  This is the cheapest fibre deal we can remember. While we can't say 100% it's the best ever, it's bloomin' cheap - and the standard broadband deal's a cracker too. With the big boys you typically pay up to £47/mth for fibre or  £41/mth for standard speed, so the savings here could be £400+/yr.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        | 1. |  | Ends TUE:  BT   fibre b'band & line rent, £408 over a year, but  £250 back so equiv '£13/mth'. This 1-year contract BT deal* via cable.co.uk starts  early today (Wed) and ends next Tue. The broadband is both fast -  up-to-52Mb fibre                                                                                (3x  standard speed, so good for heavy downloading, gaming, streaming or multiple  users) - and discounted, but the real savings come from huge cashback. Here are the details... 
 - Current BT broadband users can't get it. Yet BT phone users are fine. It’s available to 83% of the  UK (you’re told when applying).
 - Fibre broadband  £10/mth. After the contract ends you pay its standard rate, currently £28.50/mth.
 - Standard BT line rental, currently £18.99/mth. Includes weekend calls to UK landlines,  see  call costs.
 - £59.99 set-up costs. Includes activation and  p&p for the  'free'   router.
 - You get a prepaid Mastercard with £200 on (spendable almost anywhere) & £50 cashback IF you claim them. Annoyingly BT  won't remind you, so diarise  to claim via  these  Mastercard and cashback links within 3mths of activation (they take up to 45 days  to arrive).
 - Is the  price fixed during the contract? Technically it's not, though we're told BT has no plans to increase it. If it did though, you'd almost certainly be entitled to ditch your contract penalty-free.
 
 COST ANALYSIS: You pay  a total of £407.87 over a year (before calls) but  claim the cashback & use the Mastercard and it's effectively  £157.87, which is equivalent to £13.16/mth.
 
 Already with BT broadband?  Other fibre deals start at  £19.33/mth - full info in Cheap  Broadband.
 |                                                                                 |  |  |                                                                                 | 2. |  | Ends FRI or earlier. Sky broadband & line code gets equiv '£5.33/mth'. MSE Blagged. Grab one of 11,000 codes  left via this Sky link* and then apply by Fri night for a 1yr contract with discounted standard, up-to-17Mb  speed, unlimited-download broadband, and £50 bill credit on top. Here are the details... 
 - You must be a Sky newbie. Or at least not have had its phone, TV or broadband in the last 12mths. It's available to 90% of the UK (if not, you're told when applying).
 - Line rental at half its standard price, currently £18.99/mth so you pay £9.50.  Calls aren't included. and they cost a bit more than BT to landlines, less to mobiles. (Sky call costs.)
 - A year's  'free' broadband & router.  After the contract end you pay its standard rate, currently £10/mth.
 -  You pay £5 for card verification, which you get back. This is refunded on your first bill.
 -  We've blagged £50 credit for your bill. It's added AUTOMATICALLY once your account's set up (on top of the refunded £5). So if you don't rack up other charges, eg, calls, the credit covers everything for 5mths, then you'll pay  £2ish in month 6, followed by £9.50 in months 7-12.
 - No line/switching from cable? There's a £20 new line fee (applies to a few others too).
 
 COST ANALYSIS: The £50 credit means you'll only pay £64 for the year (excl calls & new line fee if charged), equiv to £5.33/mth.
 
 Already with Sky? Top alternatives start at equiv  £16/mth -  see Cheap  Broadband for  full options.
 |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           |  |  |                                                                                 | 3. | Don't want to switch? Haggle.  This can be a  secret weapon to bag top prices, as the big broadband providers  are among the easiest to haggle with. If you're happy with your  current service but paying too much, use the deals above as a benchmark   to negotiate the cost down. See haggling with BT, Plusnet, Sky, TalkTalk & Virgin tips. |                                                                                 |  |  |                                                                                  | 4. | How fast is your current broadband & how fast will the new one  be?  Do a free  2-min speed test* to see how speedy your  broadband actually is (try at different times of day for the best picture). 
 As for the new provider, it's tricky to know how quick it'll be. Firms only have to list 'up to' speeds, and outrageously the rules say only 10% of customers need to get that speed  to  make that claim. Yet  most major providers  give you a minimum speed at sign-up, and if you're getting speeds "significantly below" that, you may be able to leave penalty-free.
 
 To find out  your rights and what speed you're actually getting,  see our  guide to testing your broadband speed.
 |                                                                                  |  |  |                                                                                   | 5. | 14 tricks to boost your  CURRENT broadband speed. There's lots you can do, from good router positioning to getting a free signal-boosting widget, or using your home's electricity circuit to increase Wi-Fi range. See our  14 Broadband Speed Boosting Tricks. |                                                                                  |  |  |                                                                                 | 6. | Don't want to pay line rental? Sorry.  Our 'Is the landline dead?' poll showed 64% of you don't have a home phone or rarely use it. But while there are some broadband-only deals,  they usually cost more than bundles with  lines - so just get those and don't plug the phone in. |                                                                                  |  |  |                                                                                    | 7. | What does "available to XX% of the UK" mean? Firms tend to be only able to give the really cheap prices if they have their own kit in the exchange cabinets on the streets - these are called 'unbundled exchanges'. Otherwise the service isn't usually   available, or it's at a much higher price - we tell you the percentage of homes that can get the deals we feature. |                                                                                  |  |  |                            | 8. | Member of a cashback site? Check if  bigger cashback is possible. Sometimes deals are more lucrative via cashback sites (you can join them for free).  Ensure you're comparing like-for-like, eg, check the prices and contract lengths are the same - you may find you get more cashback but are locked in for longer, meaning it's not worth it. For more help and  pros & cons of cashback sites, read our Top Cashback Sites guide. |                                                                                  |  |  |                                                                                  | 9. | Want to add a TV package to a deal?  There's no simple solution.  BT and Sky also offer TV packages but it all depends on what channels you want. See our Cheap TV Deals guide for full info. |                                                                                  |  |  |  
 |  |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |       | Now SSE's joined the rest of the Big 6   in  revealing price moves, you can truly see who's cheapest, & save £350 
 Compare  now and you may be shocked at the  size of the savings. That's because 5 of the Big 6 energy providers have announced standard price hikes, so if you check now,  savings are against the new higher rates. And even though British Gas is freezing prices until August (and we think they'll rise then), its standard rates are still £100s/yr more on typical use than the cheapest. So take just 5 mins now to do an EASY  Cheap Energy Club comparison.                        | Average annual dual-fuel       bills Use our Cheap Energy Club for a bespoke comparison |    |  |            | DEAL | PRICE |            | Cheapest 1yr FIX (no hikes  for 1yr) | £834/yr |            | Cheapest 2yr FIX (no hikes  for two winters) | £969/yr (+ £30 cashback via Cheap Energy Club) |            | Now compare to Big 6 standard tariffs |            | PROVIDER | PRICE | OVERPAYMENT VS CHEAPEST |            | Npower | UP 10.2% tomorrow  to £1,187 | £353/yr |            | Scottish Power | UP 9.1% on 31 Mar to £1,167 | £333/yr |            | E.on | UP 9.3% on 26 Apr to £1,144 | £310/yr |            | SSE (incl Scot Hydro, Southern Elec, Swalec & Atlantic) | UP 5.7% on 28 Apr to £1,129 | £295/yr |            | EDF | Went UP 1.2% on 1 Mar to £1,082 | £248/yr |            | British Gas | Frozen till Aug at £1,044 | £210/yr |            | Based on regulator Ofgem's typical use, dual fuel, monthly direct debit and paperless billing. |  
              Avoid the hikes and save up to £350/yr, or lock in for longer. Once prices rise, a typical user on a Big 6 standard dual-fuel tariff will pay an average £1,126/yr, with the highest from Npower at a typical £1,187/yr. On the same use, the cheapest 1yr fix is £834/yr - a saving of up to £350/yr.     As Wayne tweeted:"@MartinSLewis just saved Mum & Dad £373/yr by switching gas and elec from a standard to a fixed tariff."   If you want to fix for  longer, we've blagged the cheapest 18mth dual-fuel tariff out there, from Flow Energy, at £929/yr on typical use. It's also available as elec- and gas-only. There are 20,000 available, for new customers only, and  you  get £30 dual-fuel cashback (£15 single) via our Cheap Energy Club. It's pricier than the cheapest 1yr but protects against price rises for longer. To find your saving: Check our Cheap Energy Club top picks comparison for full reviews, which  includes the Flow deal, or do a full market comparison. If we can switch you, we pay £30 dual-fuel cashback (£15 single).           Don't want to switch supplier? You could still save £200+/yr. At least move to your supplier's best deal,  saving up to  £200/yr, based on typical use. Our new 'My Current Supplier' filter on Cheap Energy Club  only shows deals from your  provider (but check your info is correct) - you  also get cashback if we can switch you. |  |    |  |    |       | New. Rent out your  clothes,   car, home,  garden or even dining table for cash. Some have made £100s. See How to rent out almost anything for cash. 
 Lifetime ISAs  coming soon - up to £32k free. Your Qs answered. See our full Lifetime ISAs guide. 
 PPI reclaim deadline - Martin's 5 things EVERYONE must know. The regulator is cutting off  PPI reclaims - if you HAVE or EVER HAD a loan, credit or store card, mortgage, overdraft or catalogue debt, take five minutes to read Reclaim PPI for FREE. 
 Next 50% sale - a biggie  MoneySavers wait for. Online and in stores from Sat. Full analysis: Next sale. 
 Urgent. New NS&I bond to pay 2.2% on up to £3,000, but go ASAP to get 2.2% on up to £85,000. In last week's Budget the Chancellor confirmed from April the NS&I bond will pay 2.2% fixed for 3yrs on up to £3,000.  Yet right now Atom Bank's massive best-buy 3yr fix pays the same on up to £100,000, but limit it to  £85,000 if you want full protection  under the UK savings safety programme. As last week it cut its 1yr fix rate, we don't think it'll be around for long.  
 TWO pairs of prescription specs £17 via code. MSE Blagged. Incl lenses & delivery.  Spec-tacular |  |         |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |       | MSE founder Martin Lewis says 'PARENTS, YOU MUST READ THIS... there's a massive shake-up coming' 
 The Chancellor confirmed two major childcare changes in last week's Budget - the increase to 30hrs' free nursery provision for  3 & 4 year olds, and the new Tax-Free Childcare scheme (especially good news if you're self-employed).  So how does it all fit together, who's eligible, and what should you do? Martin  (mini-MSE's daddy) guides you  step by step. All childcare below refers to Ofsted (or equiv) registered nurseries, childminders, after-school clubs etc.
            New. 30hrs' free childcare  for 3 & 4 year olds. From Sep the 15hrs' free state nursery provision you get 38 weeks a year  rises to 30hrs (in Eng), provided you work 16+hrs a week (both in a couple must work) and no one parent earns  £100,000+/yr. Yet many nurseries aren't happy - see full info (incl for rest of UK) in 30hrs' free childcare. 
      Are you eligible for childcare tax  credits, typically worth £3,000/yr?  If you pay for childcare, work 16+hrs a week (couples must both work) and have a sub-£46,000 family income  you could be entitled to these tax credits - a silly name and NOT the same as child tax credits, it's just cash in your bank. I'm not saying that you will be, just  it's  worth checking. Full help in  Childcare Tax Credits. If you  get them, they're usually a winner ahead of what's below. 
      Childcare Vouchers - pay  for childcare from pre-tax income, but sign up soon.  Anyone with kids whose employer offers Childcare Vouchers can get them. Here you usually swap pre-tax salary for vouchers. Eg, a basic-rate taxpayer can swap £1,000 of salary, which is only £700ish in take-home pay, for £1,000 in Childcare Vouchers, saving £300. To get these you must sign up by April 2018, so decide now if they're for you. Full help in Childcare Vouchers.      New. 'Tax-Free Childcare' means  up to £2,000/yr free per child. This starts next month for the youngest children, and will be rolled out over the year for the rest. For every 80p you put in an NS&I Tax-Free Childcare account, up to £8,000/yr, the state adds 20p (so up to  £2,000/yr free per child). To be eligible, you must work  16+hrs a week (couples both must work) and no one parent can earn over £100,000. See our new Tax-Free Childcare guide for more.       Which wins, Childcare Vouchers or Tax-Free Childcare (TFC)? You can't have both.   This is complex - we've a full Childcare Vouchers vs Tax-Free Childcare infographic to help - yet here's a  brief summary...
 - Eligibility: The self-employed can't get vouchers; couples with only one working parent can't get TFC.
 - Discount size: Vouchers  are an effective discount of 32% off what you pay for basic-rate taxpayers (42% higher rate, 47% top rate), whereas    TFC's  20% off for all, however...
 - Max free money: TFC is up to £2,000/yr free per child (so 3 kids is £6,000/yr free), dwarfing vouchers'  £590-£930 per parent.
 So if you're eligible for both, TFC wins for more kids & bigger childcare costs; vouchers for fewer kids & lower costs. |  |    |  |    |       | 36  Barcelona MoneySaving tips. Our Nou guide,  incl  £2 airport transfers, free Wi-Fi, cheap tapas and  tricks to gawk at  Gaudi's work for free. Viva Barcelona 
       Cheapest couriered Mother's Day bouquets £20-£25. It's a week on Sunday. Incl £5 off Debenhams Flowers code, Moonpig 15% off & 100 stems at M&S for £25. See all  Mother's Day deals. 
 Urgent. 4,000 free Ideal Home Show London tix left but only on  selected dates. Plus 2for1 on all dates. Show from Fri 24 Mar-Sun 9 Apr. Ideal Home Show 
 Make money doing quick online surveys, polls, games and searches. MSE Blagged. MoneySavers love doing 'em, and we've an extra £10 reward for newbies. Swagbucks 
 Craft(y) beer buying tips. From tarting beer club promos to stacking supermarket deals & codes, read MSE Nick's tricks of the trade. £1 craft beers? Related: Get a free pint of Guinness on St Patrick's Day. Pls be Drinkaware. 
 £18 pansy baskets and plants bundle (norm £40). MSE Blagged. Gets 2 hanging baskets and 12 jumbo plug plants. 1,500 bundles avail. Jersey Plants Direct |  |         |  |    |       | They can get this email free every week |  |    |  |         |  |      |  |    |       | Shops pay banks when you spend,   but   grab some of it  via a cashback credit card and make £100s/yr 
 Here's what really goes on when you spend on a credit card...  banks make money in two main ways:  charging you interest and getting paid by retailers. While the amount shops pay has dropped, it's still enough for some cards to give  up to 5% back to you. So  if you're debt-free and can pay it off in full,  get a cashback card that pays you and put all  the spending you can on it - though it's not an excuse to overspend. Romell does: "So far with Amex I've made £200 in 4 months."       Earn 5% cashback for the first 3mths, then best rates after. Amex cards win - while not universally accepted, most big stores & many smaller ones do take 'em. - The fee-free Amex Everyday  (eligibility calc / apply*) gives 5% for 3mths (max £100), then up to 1% after, though you must spend £3k/yr to get ANY cashback (22.9% rep APR).
 - If spending about £9k+/yr,   Amex Platinum (eligibility calc / apply*) can win. It has a £25/yr fee, but gives 5% for 3mths (max £125) and   is up to a higher  1.25% after (28.2% rep APR).
      0.5% cashback everywhere, yet easier to get and accepted in more places. The Aqua Reward (eligibility calc / apply*) gives 0.5% back  (max £100/yr) on all spending. Far more people should qualify as it accepts those with little or poor credit history, but  has a horrid 34.9% rep APR.      Top quasi-cashback (vouchers): 1% in Asda, 0.75% at Amazon.                        The  Asda and Amazon cards give 1% and  0.75% respectively on spending in their stores, 0.5% elsewhere. Amazon adds a £10 vch on acceptance. Both pay in store vouchers.  Full rates, help & options in Top Cashback Credit Cards (APR Examples).           Cashback card need-to-knows...
 1) Always repay IN FULL, preferably by direct debit, to avoid interest or charges  which'll dwarf the gain.
 2) Don't withdraw cash - you don't get cashback, with credit cards you pay interest & it can hurt credit scores.
 3) Don't bust your credit limit as you'll pay a penalty.
 4) All credit-check you when you apply. Protect your  score  using our quick eligibility calc to see your chances of getting a card. Or join our Credit Club for the same, plus your free Experian Credit Report, Credit & Affordability Scores and your Credit Hit Rate.
 5) Cashback is usually paid annually, in vouchers when you hit the trigger amounts, or monthly.
 |  |    |  |    |       | FLASH Habitat  sale - 25% off almost everything. Wed-Thu only. Online and in stores. Habitat 
 SUCCESS OF THE WEEK: (Send us yours on this or any topic)"Direct Line  quoted me £420 for my car insurance renewal.  Its website quoted  £195 for identical coverage as a new customer - one  call later  they matched it, saving   £225. Minimal effort, totally ridiculous but great."
 
 £140ish Nails Inc magnetic nail polish collection £14 all-in. MSE Blagged. Incl fishnet/star-shaped magnets. 2,300 avail 
 Two free Alton Towers tix via £6ish spend (norm up to £105 a pair). From Sat, collect 10 tokens in papers. 180,000 pairs avail |  |    |  |    |       |  |    |  |    | Stand up to rogue bailiffs. A group of debt charities including Citizens Advice and StepChange is warning of councils and firms using overzealous bailiffs. It wants to know if you've had to deal with one  since April 2014, as part of its 'Taking Control' campaign - which is calling on the Ministry of Justice to introduce an independent regulator to protect people from unfair treatment. Tell your story, and for more see our Debt Help guide. |  |    |  |    |  |         |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |         |  |    |  |    |  |    |  |    |       |  |    | Thu  16 Mar - Good Morning Britain, ITV, Deals of the Week, 7.40am. View previousFri 17 Mar - This Morning, ITV, Martin's Quick Deals, from 10.30am. View previous
 Mon 20 Mar - This Morning, ITV, from 10.30am
 Mon 20 Mar - BBC Radio 5 Live, Lunch Money Martin, noon. Subscribe to podcast
 |    |  |    |     Wed 15 Mar - Share Radio, 12.20pmWed 15 Mar - BBC Radio Cumbria, 'Money Talks', from 6pm
 Thu 16 Mar - BBC  Radio Tees, 10.35am
 Fri 17 Mar - BBC South West stations, breakfast
 Tue 21 Mar - BBC Radio       Cambridgeshire, 2.20pm
 |  |    |  |    |       |  |    | Q: I have some old  £50 notes that are out of circulation that my mum  gave me shortly before she passed away. Will I have any trouble  exchanging them for new notes at the Bank of England? Cathy, by email.  MSE Rosie's A: You should be able to at the Bank of England, but that's likely to be your only option as normal banks probably won't take them.
 As far as the Bank of England is concerned, notes retain their value for all time, even after they're withdrawn. It'll exchange them for free  in person in the City of London, or by post (of course, putting notes in the post is risky, though where you live may determine what you do).  This Bank of England page should explain what to do. Also, some £5 notes and £1 coins will soon go out of circulation - see our coin warning for what it means for you.  Please suggest a question of the week (we can't reply to individual emails).  |  |    |  |    |       |  |    | That's it for this week, but before we go, last Wednesday  while MPs debated the Budget, hundreds protested outside Parliament in aid of WASPI (Women Against State Pension Inequality - fighting controversial changes to  the women's  state pension age). Watch how our Martin gave them his support and encouraged them to keep campaigning to make a difference. Also see the latest in the WASPI fight. We hope you save some money,The MSE team
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