8 tips for buying on hire purchase

8 tips for buying on hire purchase

With the Christmas sales period in full swing, there are lots of attractive finance deals out there.

40 months interest free! No repayments till May!

But before you get too excited at the prospect of taking that LCD TV or lounge suite home on the weekend, take a moment to read our 8 tips for buying on hire purchase:

  1. Always ask the retailer to tell you all the fees and charges you must pay.
     
  2. If the deal offers 0% interest, ask what the interest rate will be on balances left at the end of the interest free period.
     
  3. Ask for a copy of the ‘disclosure statement’ detailing all the terms of the credit deal and read it carefully before you agree to the deal.  By law you must be given this statement before you sign or within five working days of signing.
     
  4. Compare the charges and fees with the price of what you are buying. It may be that the charges amount to more than the interest you would pay on a different sort of loan or your credit card.
     
  5. Work out the total interest you will pay on your purchase with Sorted's Hire Purchase calculator
     
  6. Only commit to a 0% interest hire purchase or credit sales agreement if you are sure you can repay most, if not all, of the debt in the interest free period. That way you will avoid high interest rates on unpaid balances.
     
  7. Avoid taking on several hire purchase or finance deals at once. It can be difficult to keep track of when each deal has to be paid off and it can be hard to find the money to service many debts running at the same time.
     
  8. Take your time to decide. While, by law, you have three working days after you receive a disclosure statement to change your mind and withdraw from the hire purchase or finance deal, you will still have to find a way to pay for the purchases you made.
Glossary: interest
Glossary: debt
Glossary: interest rates
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Last post by morfran at 12:42 pm on May 27, 2011

Q card

My wife had a Q card for some purchases too. She did pay it all off in time and managed not to pay any added interest, then she cancelled it. After four or five more attempts, they seem to have actually stopped sending statements. I'd steer well clear. You're better off saving up for it than buying with one of these.

Glossary: interest
morfran User comment Posted at 12:42 pm on May 27, 2011

Credit card

I tried a "Q" card...what a huge mistake!!! They ran ads just like you say, no interest, no charges 40 weeks interest free. What a load of rubbish, this has turned out to be the most expensive card I have ever had and as soon as I pay it of, it is already been through the shredder, I will never have one again or reccomend ANY one else does

Glossary: interest
Bob! User comment Posted at 04:20 pm on May 06, 2011
 
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