3 Simple Steps to a Secured Loan

Submitting Details...
Step 1 of 3 About your loan
 
 
 
 
 
 

Step 2 of 3 About your loan

Is secured on your home. Rates depend on your circumstances; usually lower than an unsecured loan and often more flexible.

Not secured on your home. May not qualify you for the best rates. Applying to a number of lenders may affect your credit score.
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Step 2 of 3 About your loan

Based on your information we recommend you speak to a personal debt adviser.

They will offer you advice on:
  • Whether a loan is your best option
  • Consolidating your debts
  • Reducing the amount you owe
  • How to freeze your interest payments
  • Protecting you from creditors

Step 3 of 3 Your details
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

Finished


Thank you for your enquiry.

Your adviser will be in touch with you shortly.


Recent Posts
  • All the day’s Money stories

  • Wedgwood Museum closure condemned by Unesco
    Museum listed as one of world’s top 20 cultural assets due to be sold off to pay £134m pension deficit after high court ruling The head of a Unesco committee that shortlisted a British museum as one of the world’s top 20 cultural assets has condemned a high court judgment that is forcing it to close. The

  • In praise of … switching your bank | Editorial
    Let’s move our money from big banks to credit unions, ethical banks and building societies What do the bankers do – work tirelessly on your behalf, or work for themselves on your money? We have an option – to move our money, but few of us actually do. In fact, we are more likely to divorce

  • Corporate banker in Japan: ‘I don’t see much innovation coming out of the UK’ | Joris Luyendijk
    A vice-president of a major western bank in Tokyo compares the banking cultures of Japan and the west • This monologue is part of a series in which people across the financial sector speak about their working lives We are meeting in the centre of Tokyo on a Saturday in January. Casually dressed for the weekend, he

  • Call for ‘industry standard’ to protect investors from hidden charges
    Hidden charges make it difficult for investors to compare funds. Now Fidelity is calling for a simple charging structure so the true cost is clear to all Fidelity Worldwide Investment is calling on investment fund companies to adopt an industry standard breakdown of costs to help end hidden charges that can damage investors’ returns. The firm

The pre-budget report and David Van Day are among this week’s stories

The fall out from the pre-budget report occupied most of the money pages over the past week as numbers were crunched and tax experts tried to establish who were the winners and losers …

According to the Sunday Times, families are worse off than when Labour came to power, despite talk of a tax giveaway. It claims families where both parents work are paying £1,283 more a year than they did in 1997, while their tax bills will have risen another £200 by 2011.

It’s an ill wind, etc, and it seems those rising bills could ultimately lead to a generation of more financially savvy consumes. The Mail on Sunday says the credit crunch has persuaded half of parents to teach their offspring how to budget. The case studies of some of those who have make interesting reading - pocket money has certainly increased since my day.

Budgeting is the order of the day over in the Mirror, where the Unwin household, and in particular mum Destine, is planning Christmas. On her shopping list: gifts for 16 kids, food and drink for Christmas Day and a big Boxing Day bash, and all for just £150. How does she do it? Common sense, mainly: “We quickly realised that we buy some things every year just for the sake of it. Even though we have loads of decorations we usually buy something new for the tree but this Christmas we’re not going to,” she said.

A few people who might not be content with a £150 Christmas featured in Tara Winter Wilson’s sisterly piece for the Telegraph. “When the money goes, so does the toxic wife”, it said, above a piece on how bankers’ wives are apparently “going ballistic” over cancelled Amexs and non-organic food. Unusually we’re asked to sympathise with “Katie’s husband, Jack, whose property portfolio disintegrated in the financial crash”, or Jeremy “a beleaguered hedge-fund manager” who “fell for an extremely beautiful yet extravagant woman”.

Finally, have you ever wondered what David Van Day does with his money? Apparently some of you have as a story on our site from eight years ago about the I’m a Celebrity … star is suddenly attracting interest. We imagine things will look a lot different when he gets out of the jungle - an appetite for bugs can be healthy for the bank balance.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Need a Loan? Visit Secured Loans Broker.

Leave a Reply