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Regular Saver Thread **New and Restarted**
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Isn't this just where you tell them you want to continue with the same standing order and the old/matured RS balance moves back to your current and reverts to £0 and starts again so the RS stays open ready for the next 12 months without having to change the standing order details or account info. I thought that was common knowledge.0
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Chorley BS was a one-off and wasn't too long. But Virgin Money seems to be almost weekly and certainly monthly. Every issue sparks lengthy discussions.
I was just suggesting that key product info be discussed here, such as rate, new issues, operation etc with the mechanics and more involved technical questions on a dedicated thread just so it makes this thread, which is about all regular savers, easier to navigate and less congested with just one provider.0 -
Santander changed this last June, where it will naturally roll over to a new one and transfer your funds to your current account (this is not on maturity date).
Even though they stipulate that this will only happen if you have a SO in place upon maturity, this isn't the case as with 4 of ours (family) they automatically rolled them over even though we didn't have SO's in place.
They naturally start the new one from the maturity date, so if you don't have a SO in place then you lose some interest or the other option would be to close it and re-open another 1.0 -
youngretired wrote: »Santander changed this last June, where it will naturally roll over to a new one and transfer your funds to your current account (this is not on maturity date).
Even though they stipulate that this will only happen if you have a SO in place upon maturity, this isn't the case as with 4 of ours (family) they automatically rolled them over even though we didn't have SO's in place.
They naturally start the new one from the maturity date, so if you don't have a SO in place then you lose some interest or the other option would be to close it and re-open another 1.
My dad has the Santander Regular eSaver and the branch clerk didn't put an end date on the SO as she asked him if he wanted the account to automatically start again, he said yes, so it will roll over to the same account number without the need to opening a new one with new details and new SO details.0 -
20SmthngSver wrote: »Isn't this just where you tell them you want to continue with the same standing order and the old/matured RS balance moves back to your current and reverts to £0 and starts again so the RS stays open ready for the next 12 months without having to change the standing order details or account info. I thought that was common knowledge.
Well, let's put it this way: I didn't know0 -
youngretired wrote: »Santander changed this last June, where it will naturally roll over to a new one and transfer your funds to your current account (this is not on maturity date).
Even though they stipulate that this will only happen if you have a SO in place upon maturity, this isn't the case as with 4 of ours (family) they automatically rolled them over even though we didn't have SO's in place.
They naturally start the new one from the maturity date, so if you don't have a SO in place then you lose some interest or the other option would be to close it and re-open another 1.
LBG have also adopted this "rollover" approach - at last - although, just like Santander, there are issues around the funding. When doing this over the 'phone with Santander, I had to raise the issue of extension of the SO, which had expired after the final payment to the maturing account. So less automatic a rollover than you expect.
In recent documentation from Lloyds/BoS/Halifax, only the Halifax mentioned the possibility of a rollover - although they all describe it online. There's a snag with LBG, though. If you've funded the previous accounts on a 13-payment, maximum figure basis, the first SO payment to the RS is accepted and then paid back into the source account - because you've already made that month's maximum-funding payment to that sort code / account number when you made the 13th payment on the maturing account.
Not an issue if you allow the old RS to expire and then open a completely new RS.
[ Hey, not a mention of - you know who.]0 -
Ah okay. I'm sure it's been mentioned a few times on this thread. As far as I'm aware, Santander is the only bank to offer this rollover.0
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A completely new system, to offer the same feature as they offer on their many other on-line-openable accounts - and offered on RS issue 11. What was I thinking about !0
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20SmthngSver wrote: »As far as I'm aware, Santander is the only bank to offer this rollover.
Now you know better..:)0
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