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Beware of those hidden costs

March 7, 2013 09:30

By

Martin Lewis,

Martin Lewis

3 min read

It is the financial nightmares you never thought would happen that really hurt. Here is how to fight back against the top 10 hidden bill perils.

1. “My six-year-old spent £3,200 on an iPhone game”.
Letting youngsters sit with you while you use your smartphone or tablet means they are likely to know your password, and that can be expensive.
Recently, England rugby player Sam Vesty got smacked with a £3,200 bill after his six and eight-year-olds bought their virtual farm animals a virtual mountain of food, with real cash, at £70 a pop over three hours. It is disgusting that a kids’ game allows this, but it happens, so protect yourself.
If letting the kids use your tech, protect your password — your kids may know it without you knowing, so change regularly. Plus ensure your phone’s “in app purchases” setting is restricted, so it needs a password. Also speak to your network about financial and parental controls.
An alternative with iPhones is to delink your credit/debit card from your account and buy vouchers instead. Then it will never go over the top. Finally, if all goes wrong and you have been stung by a massive charge due to the kids, call up and explain. Often they will wipe it on a “one strike and you’re out” policy.

2. Avoid paying £150 a month for busting your overdraft.
Break your overdraft limit by even £1 and you can face charges of up to £5 a day or, at Clydesdale, up to £35 a transaction. Ensure you stay in the black.
If you have had charges and they have put you in financial hardship, you may still be able to reclaim. See www.moneysavingexpert.com/bankcharges.

3. Beware of online traps.
Shockingly, even sites like The Trainline and Ticketmaster have reportedly made an extra 30 pieces of silver by allowing membership clubs like Shopper Discounts to push these offers once you have bought stuff.
Many have been caught out, as MoneySavingExpert.com forum user Sweetie27 wrote: “Bought a train ticket and must have clicked a link, as for two years Shopper Discounts has been taking £10/mth from my account, now totalling £200. I did not know anything about this and am totally gutted.” Communications about these have marginally improved since then, but be very careful. My view is these aren’t worth signing up to.