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Club Lloyds Monthly Saver question
Comments
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Replying to Eco_Miser post above: I've seen the dated to next banking day when moving money around my Halifax bank accounts during weekends (savings to current and vice versa). As far as I know, Halifax and Lloyds are part of the same group.Eco_Miser said:
Well, like Descrabled, I've never tried transferring to a Regular Saver account on a non-banking day, but I have moved money around on weekends, and it gets dated to next banking day, even in interest paying current accounts. Please let us know what happens to your transfer on 01 May 2023.OceanSound said:
Pretty sure if you transfer from Lloyds Current account to Monthly saver on 01 May 2023 (Bank Holiday), money will be in the monthly saver account on 01 May 2023. Once the money is in the account can they pay interest from a future date? Doubt it.Eco_Miser said:
It's highly likely that the transfer will be dated on (and interest paid from) the Monday if it actually happens on a weekend.phillw said:
I'm kinda tempted to not use a standing order, so I can transfer the money myself on the 1st. Even if that is a weekend.
I suppose if I go down the making manual payment route for the Lloyds Monthly saver (as opposed to the SO), I could transfer £399.99 on 01 December 2022, then on 26 December 2022 (next bank holiday from now) do a manual transfer of £0.01 from lloyds current account to lloyds monthly saver to see if it's dated 26 December 2022 or 27 December 2022.
To everyone:
I've just seen this, on the Halifax website (https://www.halifax.co.uk/bankaccounts/rates-rewards-fees.html):"Interest we pay on credit balancesIf you have a Student Current Account, Cardcash account (account holders aged 16 and 17 only) or Expresscash account, we will pay you interest on the money in your account."
Yes, its to do with a student account, Cardcash account, or Expresscash account (all paying interest on credit balances it seems), so not the same as Lloyds Monthly saver, but it does say 'we will pay you interest on the money in your account'. Nothing about 'we will pay interest from the date shown alongside payments into your account'. With Halifax and Lloyds being part of the same group I would think the same applies across the board. Actually, I wouldn't be surprised if there's an Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) rule that says financial institutions must pay interest from the date the money is in the account.
edit: from FCA website (https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/making-receiving-payments) -Receiving a paymentIf money is paid into your account it must be available to you and start earning interest as soon as the bank receives it if it was:* made electronically, such as by CHAPS, Bacs or Faster Payments systems*cash deposited at the counter of the bank* transferred between accounts with the same bank
If money is paid into a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period, it does not have to be made available immediately, but the bank must start paying interest on the same business day as it receives the funds.0 -
£1500 per calendar month. Doesn't have to be in one hit, so nothing stopping you (I think) dropping the same £500 in three times.Sea_Shell said:If I were to (re)upgrade my current account to "club" to access this account ... Would the £1500 pay in have to be made during October so as to not get charged the fee?
Wondering wether to wait until November and do everything at the start of the month.
Plus genuinely decent account perks. I chose x6 odeon cinema tickets. As my local is a deluxe one... Tickets are normally 18 quid.0 -
Sea_Shell said:If I were to (re)upgrade my current account to "club" to access this account ... Would the £1500 pay in have to be made during October so as to not get charged the fee?
Wondering wether to wait until November and do everything at the start of the month.
I know they used to concede the first month,and perhaps they still do.
To be sure, you know can pay in and out as much as you can easily lay your hands on to get the £1500 ie £250 6 times or 15x £100 etc?
Upgrade is instant and transferring in and out with another of your Lloyds acs is instant too.
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I opened club Lloyd's account on 18 October last year. Didn't pay-in £1500 that month (only £203.07).soulsaver said:Sea_Shell said:If I were to (re)upgrade my current account to "club" to access this account ... Would the £1500 pay in have to be made during October so as to not get charged the fee?
Wondering wether to wait until November and do everything at the start of the month.
I know they used to concede the first month,and perhaps they still do.
To be sure, you know can pay in and out as much as you can easily lay your hands on to get the £1500 ie £250 6 times or 15x £100 etc?
Upgrade is instant and transferring in and out with another of your Lloyds acs is instant too.
In November didn't pay-in £1500 either (only paid in £0.04 for some reason). I cannot see a fee charged (for October - as the fee is charged if you don't pay-in £1500 in the month before). So the first month grace/fee forfeit definitely happened.
In December paid-in nearly £5000. Fee was charged (for missing November 2021 £1500 pay-in) . I cannot see an entry saying it was waived. So it was definitely charged.
After that I've been paying in over £1500 every month and the fee was waived consistently (it was waived in January 2022 too due to over £1500 pay-in in December 2021).
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The key words in the FCA quote are, "business day." A weekend and bank holiday are not business days and Lloyds Banking Group's banks will date deposits and withdrawals on these days as the next business (working) day. This is how it's always worked with Lloyds. You need to dig into its banking terms and conditions, IIRC it's all in there.OceanSound said:
Replying to Eco_Miser post above: I've seen the dated to next banking day when moving money around my Halifax bank accounts during weekends (savings to current and vice versa). As far as I know, Halifax and Lloyds are part of the same group.Eco_Miser said:
Well, like Descrabled, I've never tried transferring to a Regular Saver account on a non-banking day, but I have moved money around on weekends, and it gets dated to next banking day, even in interest paying current accounts. Please let us know what happens to your transfer on 01 May 2023.OceanSound said:
Pretty sure if you transfer from Lloyds Current account to Monthly saver on 01 May 2023 (Bank Holiday), money will be in the monthly saver account on 01 May 2023. Once the money is in the account can they pay interest from a future date? Doubt it.Eco_Miser said:
It's highly likely that the transfer will be dated on (and interest paid from) the Monday if it actually happens on a weekend.phillw said:
I'm kinda tempted to not use a standing order, so I can transfer the money myself on the 1st. Even if that is a weekend.
I suppose if I go down the making manual payment route for the Lloyds Monthly saver (as opposed to the SO), I could transfer £399.99 on 01 December 2022, then on 26 December 2022 (next bank holiday from now) do a manual transfer of £0.01 from lloyds current account to lloyds monthly saver to see if it's dated 26 December 2022 or 27 December 2022.
To everyone:
I've just seen this, on the Halifax website (https://www.halifax.co.uk/bankaccounts/rates-rewards-fees.html):"Interest we pay on credit balancesIf you have a Student Current Account, Cardcash account (account holders aged 16 and 17 only) or Expresscash account, we will pay you interest on the money in your account."
Yes, its to do with a student account, Cardcash account, or Expresscash account (all paying interest on credit balances it seems), so not the same as Lloyds Monthly saver, but it does say 'we will pay you interest on the money in your account'. Nothing about 'we will pay interest from the date shown alongside payments into your account'. With Halifax and Lloyds being part of the same group I would think the same applies across the board. Actually, I wouldn't be surprised if there's an Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) rule that says financial institutions must pay interest from the date the money is in the account.
edit: from FCA website (https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/making-receiving-payments) -Receiving a paymentIf money is paid into your account it must be available to you and start earning interest as soon as the bank receives it if it was:* made electronically, such as by CHAPS, Bacs or Faster Payments systems*cash deposited at the counter of the bank* transferred between accounts with the same bank
If money is paid into a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period, it does not have to be made available immediately, but the bank must start paying interest on the same business day as it receives the funds.Other banks are or have been different e.g., Santander pays/used to pay interest on deposits made on a Saturday.2 -
You've clearly missed that the key words belong to 'a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period...'!!!!wmb194 said:
The key words in the FCA quote are, "business day." A weekend and bank holiday are not business days and Lloyds Banking Group's banks will date deposits and withdrawals on these days as the next business (working) day. This is how it's always worked with Lloyds. You need to dig into its banking terms and conditions, IIRC it's all in there.OceanSound said:
Replying to Eco_Miser post above: I've seen the dated to next banking day when moving money around my Halifax bank accounts during weekends (savings to current and vice versa). As far as I know, Halifax and Lloyds are part of the same group.Eco_Miser said:
Well, like Descrabled, I've never tried transferring to a Regular Saver account on a non-banking day, but I have moved money around on weekends, and it gets dated to next banking day, even in interest paying current accounts. Please let us know what happens to your transfer on 01 May 2023.OceanSound said:
Pretty sure if you transfer from Lloyds Current account to Monthly saver on 01 May 2023 (Bank Holiday), money will be in the monthly saver account on 01 May 2023. Once the money is in the account can they pay interest from a future date? Doubt it.Eco_Miser said:
It's highly likely that the transfer will be dated on (and interest paid from) the Monday if it actually happens on a weekend.phillw said:
I'm kinda tempted to not use a standing order, so I can transfer the money myself on the 1st. Even if that is a weekend.
I suppose if I go down the making manual payment route for the Lloyds Monthly saver (as opposed to the SO), I could transfer £399.99 on 01 December 2022, then on 26 December 2022 (next bank holiday from now) do a manual transfer of £0.01 from lloyds current account to lloyds monthly saver to see if it's dated 26 December 2022 or 27 December 2022.
To everyone:
I've just seen this, on the Halifax website (https://www.halifax.co.uk/bankaccounts/rates-rewards-fees.html):"Interest we pay on credit balancesIf you have a Student Current Account, Cardcash account (account holders aged 16 and 17 only) or Expresscash account, we will pay you interest on the money in your account."
Yes, its to do with a student account, Cardcash account, or Expresscash account (all paying interest on credit balances it seems), so not the same as Lloyds Monthly saver, but it does say 'we will pay you interest on the money in your account'. Nothing about 'we will pay interest from the date shown alongside payments into your account'. With Halifax and Lloyds being part of the same group I would think the same applies across the board. Actually, I wouldn't be surprised if there's an Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) rule that says financial institutions must pay interest from the date the money is in the account.
edit: from FCA website (https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/making-receiving-payments) -Receiving a paymentIf money is paid into your account it must be available to you and start earning interest as soon as the bank receives it if it was:* made electronically, such as by CHAPS, Bacs or Faster Payments systems*cash deposited at the counter of the bank* transferred between accounts with the same bank
If money is paid into a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period, it does not have to be made available immediately, but the bank must start paying interest on the same business day as it receives the funds.Other banks are or have been different e.g., Santander pays/used to pay interest on deposits made on a Saturday.0 -
Thanks for the info on Club Lloyds. I had that account for many years but couldn't remember how they dealt with a part month, as far as the fee was concerned. I had half a mind it would be a bit mean to insist on the pay in, almost immediately, if the account was opened very late in the month.
I know I can pay in ad-hoc and also withdraw it to get to the £1500, but I was being a bit lazy and wanting to kill 2 birds with one stone at the start of November, as my Lloyds account is my linked account to Loanpad/Raisin, and i'll be moving money through it to a fixed deal next week.How's it going, AKA, Nutwatch? - 12 month spends to date = 2.60% of current retirement "pot" (as at end May 2025)0 -
You've missed the point: I know they used to concede the first month on opening - but this is an upgrade back to a Club.OceanSound said:
I opened club Lloyd's account on 18 October last year. Didn't pay-in £1500 that month (only £203.07).soulsaver said:Sea_Shell said:If I were to (re)upgrade my current account to "club" to access this account ... Would the £1500 pay in have to be made during October so as to not get charged the fee?
Wondering wether to wait until November and do everything at the start of the month.
I know they used to concede the first month,and perhaps they still do.
To be sure, you know can pay in and out as much as you can easily lay your hands on to get the £1500 ie £250 6 times or 15x £100 etc?
Upgrade is instant and transferring in and out with another of your Lloyds acs is instant too.
In November didn't pay-in £1500 either (only paid in £0.04 for some reason). I cannot see a fee charged (for October - as the fee is charged if you don't pay-in £1500 in the month before). So the first month grace/fee forfeit definitely happened.
In December paid-in nearly £5000. Fee was charged (for missing November 2021 £1500 pay-in) . I cannot see an entry saying it was waived. So it was definitely charged.
After that I've been paying in over £1500 every month and the fee was waived consistently (it was waived in January 2022 too due to over £1500 pay-in in December 2021).
I don't know if under these circumstances you get the grace period... so unless you know otherwise, do the £1500 if OP can.0 -
Erm, that's irrelevant. Business day still counts. Anyway, you go ahead and discover how it works for yourself but trust me, Lloyds won't pay interest on deposits made at the weekend or bank holidays.OceanSound said:
You've clearly missed that the key words belong to 'a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period...'!!!!wmb194 said:
The key words in the FCA quote are, "business day." A weekend and bank holiday are not business days and Lloyds Banking Group's banks will date deposits and withdrawals on these days as the next business (working) day. This is how it's always worked with Lloyds. You need to dig into its banking terms and conditions, IIRC it's all in there.OceanSound said:
Replying to Eco_Miser post above: I've seen the dated to next banking day when moving money around my Halifax bank accounts during weekends (savings to current and vice versa). As far as I know, Halifax and Lloyds are part of the same group.Eco_Miser said:
Well, like Descrabled, I've never tried transferring to a Regular Saver account on a non-banking day, but I have moved money around on weekends, and it gets dated to next banking day, even in interest paying current accounts. Please let us know what happens to your transfer on 01 May 2023.OceanSound said:
Pretty sure if you transfer from Lloyds Current account to Monthly saver on 01 May 2023 (Bank Holiday), money will be in the monthly saver account on 01 May 2023. Once the money is in the account can they pay interest from a future date? Doubt it.Eco_Miser said:
It's highly likely that the transfer will be dated on (and interest paid from) the Monday if it actually happens on a weekend.phillw said:
I'm kinda tempted to not use a standing order, so I can transfer the money myself on the 1st. Even if that is a weekend.
I suppose if I go down the making manual payment route for the Lloyds Monthly saver (as opposed to the SO), I could transfer £399.99 on 01 December 2022, then on 26 December 2022 (next bank holiday from now) do a manual transfer of £0.01 from lloyds current account to lloyds monthly saver to see if it's dated 26 December 2022 or 27 December 2022.
To everyone:
I've just seen this, on the Halifax website (https://www.halifax.co.uk/bankaccounts/rates-rewards-fees.html):"Interest we pay on credit balancesIf you have a Student Current Account, Cardcash account (account holders aged 16 and 17 only) or Expresscash account, we will pay you interest on the money in your account."
Yes, its to do with a student account, Cardcash account, or Expresscash account (all paying interest on credit balances it seems), so not the same as Lloyds Monthly saver, but it does say 'we will pay you interest on the money in your account'. Nothing about 'we will pay interest from the date shown alongside payments into your account'. With Halifax and Lloyds being part of the same group I would think the same applies across the board. Actually, I wouldn't be surprised if there's an Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) rule that says financial institutions must pay interest from the date the money is in the account.
edit: from FCA website (https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/making-receiving-payments) -Receiving a paymentIf money is paid into your account it must be available to you and start earning interest as soon as the bank receives it if it was:* made electronically, such as by CHAPS, Bacs or Faster Payments systems*cash deposited at the counter of the bank* transferred between accounts with the same bank
If money is paid into a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period, it does not have to be made available immediately, but the bank must start paying interest on the same business day as it receives the funds.Other banks are or have been different e.g., Santander pays/used to pay interest on deposits made on a Saturday.Btw, it also works the other way around. If you're overdrawn and you deposit enough to cover it on a Saturday you'll still be charged interest for Saturday and Sunday and it'll only be counted as cleared on Monday (or Tuesday/Wednesday if the weekend is followed by a bank holiday or two).1 -
Words aren't irrelevant.wmb194 said:
Erm, that's irrelevant. Business day still counts. Anyway, you go ahead and discover how it works for yourself but trust me, Lloyds won't pay interest on deposits made at the weekend or bank holidays.OceanSound said:
You've clearly missed that the key words belong to 'a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period...'!!!!wmb194 said:
The key words in the FCA quote are, "business day." A weekend and bank holiday are not business days and Lloyds Banking Group's banks will date deposits and withdrawals on these days as the next business (working) day. This is how it's always worked with Lloyds. You need to dig into its banking terms and conditions, IIRC it's all in there.OceanSound said:
Replying to Eco_Miser post above: I've seen the dated to next banking day when moving money around my Halifax bank accounts during weekends (savings to current and vice versa). As far as I know, Halifax and Lloyds are part of the same group.Eco_Miser said:
Well, like Descrabled, I've never tried transferring to a Regular Saver account on a non-banking day, but I have moved money around on weekends, and it gets dated to next banking day, even in interest paying current accounts. Please let us know what happens to your transfer on 01 May 2023.OceanSound said:
Pretty sure if you transfer from Lloyds Current account to Monthly saver on 01 May 2023 (Bank Holiday), money will be in the monthly saver account on 01 May 2023. Once the money is in the account can they pay interest from a future date? Doubt it.Eco_Miser said:
It's highly likely that the transfer will be dated on (and interest paid from) the Monday if it actually happens on a weekend.phillw said:
I'm kinda tempted to not use a standing order, so I can transfer the money myself on the 1st. Even if that is a weekend.
I suppose if I go down the making manual payment route for the Lloyds Monthly saver (as opposed to the SO), I could transfer £399.99 on 01 December 2022, then on 26 December 2022 (next bank holiday from now) do a manual transfer of £0.01 from lloyds current account to lloyds monthly saver to see if it's dated 26 December 2022 or 27 December 2022.
To everyone:
I've just seen this, on the Halifax website (https://www.halifax.co.uk/bankaccounts/rates-rewards-fees.html):"Interest we pay on credit balancesIf you have a Student Current Account, Cardcash account (account holders aged 16 and 17 only) or Expresscash account, we will pay you interest on the money in your account."
Yes, its to do with a student account, Cardcash account, or Expresscash account (all paying interest on credit balances it seems), so not the same as Lloyds Monthly saver, but it does say 'we will pay you interest on the money in your account'. Nothing about 'we will pay interest from the date shown alongside payments into your account'. With Halifax and Lloyds being part of the same group I would think the same applies across the board. Actually, I wouldn't be surprised if there's an Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) rule that says financial institutions must pay interest from the date the money is in the account.
edit: from FCA website (https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/making-receiving-payments) -Receiving a paymentIf money is paid into your account it must be available to you and start earning interest as soon as the bank receives it if it was:* made electronically, such as by CHAPS, Bacs or Faster Payments systems*cash deposited at the counter of the bank* transferred between accounts with the same bank
If money is paid into a cash ISA or a savings account with a notice period, it does not have to be made available immediately, but the bank must start paying interest on the same business day as it receives the funds.Other banks are or have been different e.g., Santander pays/used to pay interest on deposits made on a Saturday.Btw, it also works the other way around. If you're overdrawn and you deposit enough to cover it on a Saturday you'll still be charged interest for Saturday and Sunday and it'll only be counted as cleared on Monday (or Tuesday/Wednesday if the weekend is followed by a bank holiday or two).
I don't need to discover either. When I made a lump sum payment to my mortgage on a Bank Holiday the interest charged on the mortgage went down from the date I made the payment. Not the date it started showing on the recent transactions or bank statement. That is also what I was told by Halifax mortgages support. I called to confirm before making payment in order to maximize interest.why deposit to mortgage on a public holiday and not gain interest if money could be in a savings account elsewhere gaining interest was my quandary. I was told mortgage interest is calculated from date of payment, not date showing on statement.
The fca rules are clear. Earlier you said it's dependent on the bank. Now not so much.
Note this is not something for the bank to determine. These rules apply to all financial institutions.
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