Martin Lewis on how spending just £1 can save you thousands

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Using a credit card to spend just £1 can help protect a purchase of up to £30,000 thanks to Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act. But does it work abroad?

Spending just £1 on a credit card can save you thousands, as Martin Lewis explained at the Ideal Home Show in London this week. One of the most important laws we have is the Consumer Credit Act 1974 (CCA) which covers the rules around credit, how it’s sold and what happens if things go wrong. It offers some pretty brilliant protection, as long as some simple rules are met.

Full details on how section 75 and chargeback works https://t.co/yc6oZKvwWh #MartinLewis — Martin Lewis (@MartinSLewis) November 7, 2023 If you pay for goods or services on a UK credit card that cost between £100 and £30,000, the credit card provider is jointly responsible, along with the supplier, for any breach of contract or misrepresentation. This can involve goods not turning up, items that are damaged or don’t do what they are supposed to do or situations where you’ve been a victim of fraud.



You’re even covered if you’ve only paid for a deposit for something on your credit card – so that could just be £1 - as long as the total cost of the goods is between £100 and £30,000. Even though you only paid a pound, you’re still covered for the whole value of the item in question - so that one pound protects the other £29,999. That's all well and good for UK purchases, but, how about if you buy something overseas, Martin was asked by a guest at the Ideal Home Show at Olympia London (which runs until Sunday April 6).

“As long as it’s a UK credit card, it covers purchases anywhere in the world," he explained, but added: "I am actually awaiting an answer from the regulator at the moment, as to whose consumer rights it replicates. If you bought something in Brazil, is it Brazilian consumer rights that a UK card replicates or is it UK consumer rights that the card replicates? Nobody knows, including me because I can’t get confirmation. Read more: Martin Lewis: Biggest factor to change mortgage rates Martin Lewis: How to cut water bills by up to 90 per cent DWP State Pension age will have to rise to 71 says report “But you’ve got consumer rights and frankly most of them act as if you have the same consumer rights abroad.

"They always fight you on this, so be prepared – but yes, it applies to any purchase in the world unless there is a break due to an intermediary. "There has to be (in section 75) a direct link between the purchase and the debt. You can’t take a loan out and buy something with it and say ‘I want to go and buy the loan’ because you’ve been given money, and you’ve paid with the money.

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