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Big ways to save when borrowing small

Interest rates may be at their lowest rate for over 200 years, but small loan rates have more than doubled.

May 21, 2010 13:22

By

Martin Lewis,

Martin Lewis

4 min read

Interest rates may be at their lowest rate for over 200 years, but small loan rates have more than doubled. But there's a way to manipulate the finance market to get a loan at under half that cost.

Why rates have jumped

● Loan rates are at a nine-year high, and it is those borrowing small amounts who have been hit the hardest. While the cheapest loan for amounts under £2,000 is 18.7 per cent, many lenders are charging more than 20 per cent. In autumn 2007, and the cheapest loan was just 7.4 per cent, yet, borrow that now, and on a three-year loan you would pay nearly £400 more.

There are three reasons for this: the credit crunch means lenders' access to funds is more limited; banks are less keen to sell small loans, so competitive pressures have relaxed; and loans used to be subsidised by profits from payment protection insurance that was hard sold with them. Lenders made more money on the insurance than they did on the loan, and they don't have to include the insurance cost in the APR. Yet over the last few years there have been strong calls from many for people to avoid banks' Payment Protection Insurance (PPI) and, if it's needed, go to stand-alone insurers, who can be over 80 per cent cheaper.

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