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Wales Online
Wales Online
Vicky Shaw, PA Personal Finance Correspondent & Shane Jarvis

Save £800 by avoiding 'loyalty penalties' for services, says charity warns

People can save themselves as much as £800 by shopping around for services - and avoiding so-called loyalty penalties - a charity has said.

Around one in seven people could be paying extra for their loyalty on mortgage, mobile and broadband packages, according to Citizens Advice. The consumer charity said tackling so-called "loyalty penalties" could be worth more to some households than the £400 discount on energy bills they will receive as part of cost-of-living support packages.

More than 3,000 people were surveyed about their contracts — where longstanding customers end up paying more than they need to — and 13.5 per cent were found to be paying a loyalty penalty on at least one of their contracts for their mobile, broadband or mortgage.

People were deemed potentially to be paying more than necessary if they had been with their provider for longer than two years for their mobile, three years for broadband, and five years on a fixed-rate mortgage.

Citizens Advice said analysis of 165,000 budgets of people who asked it for debt help suggested those on lower incomes could often end up spending nearly double the proportion of their income on telecoms as people earning more. It appeared that people on an income of less than £400 per month spent £30 on average, equivalent to 8 per cent of total spending. But those earning more than £3,200 a month spent an average of £132, equating to 4.1 per cent of total expenditure.

One woman's TV, broadband and phone package shot up from £30 to £80 a month after her contract ended (PA)

Citizens Advice said in one case, a woman who signed up to a £30-a-month package for TV, landline, broadband and international calls in 2006 and who relied on disability benefits was shocked to see her bill had increased to £80 over the years. She has now switched providers.

She told the charity: “Everything is going up; gas, electric, food and I have a mortgage to pay. I shop late in the evenings to get yellow-sticker discounted food, I turned off my gas as I can’t afford to repair the boiler or use the heating and I don’t go anywhere other than my hospital appointments.

“When I asked my broadband provider why I wasn’t told about the increases, they said I should have checked my payments and contacted them to see if there was a cheaper deal.”

The charity submitted a “super complaint” about the loyalty penalty in the mobile, broadband, home insurance, mortgages and savings markets in 2018. Measures to protect home and car insurance customers from loyalty penalties were introduced by the Financial Conduct Authority in January 2022.

Some changes have come in where renewing customers pay the same price as a new customer (PA)

The changes mean insurers must offer renewing customers a price that is no higher than they would pay as a new customer.

Mike Emmett, of Citizens Advice, said: “Many people see their mobile and broadband as a lifeline. They need them to speak to people and do things like manage their Universal Credit account, and help their kids with their homework. But they’re usually reluctant to switch for fear of rocking the boat, particularly because of the prospect of credit checks.

"We also find people who are digitally excluded or who have mental health problems often prefer to speak to someone about switching, but they can wait for hours on the phone and end up giving up. It’s so frustrating when we see people who are on the lowest incomes paying the loyalty penalty, as they’re forced to jump through so many hoops to try and sort it.”

Dame Clare Moriarty, chief executive of Citizens Advice, said: “Fixing the loyalty penalty could put more than twice as much money back in some people’s pockets as the £400 October energy grant. As we all pull together to weather the cost-of-living crisis, it’s incredibly frustrating to see there are still firms out there that prefer to help themselves than help the people who’re most in need.

Ofcom says it is focused on getting consumers the best deal during challenging financial times (PA)

“The time for piecemeal pledges has passed. Regulators must tackle the loyalty penalty – no more excuses, no more delays.”

In 2020, Ofcom introduced end-of-contract notifications. These require phone, broadband and pay-TV providers to warn customers when their current contract is ending, and what they could save by signing up to a new deal. People who choose to stay with their provider without signing up to a new contract are also given details of their firm’s best deals every year.

An Ofcom spokesperson said: “At a very challenging time financially for many households, our focus is on making sure people get the best deal for them. Switching to a new deal when an existing one ends can put a significant amount of money back in people’s pockets, and we’ve taken action to make the process simpler and quicker."

A spokesman for UK Finance, representing the banking and finance industry, said: “We would always encourage people to shop around to find the best deals. If anyone is struggling with their mortgage payments, please get in touch with your lender as soon as possible to discuss the options available.”

A statement from the Financial Conduct Authority said: “Our data shows that competition is working in the mortgage market – the number of people not switching when they could save money has declined significantly since 2016, from 800,000 to an estimated 370,000.

“We welcome Citizens Advice’s work – we will continue to monitor levels of switching in the market and will consider if further steps are needed to ensure that markets provide fair outcomes for borrowers, including longstanding and vulnerable consumers.”

For more stories from where you live, visit InYourArea.

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