![](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
70 集
![](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
The Martin Lewis Podcast BBC Radio 5 Live
-
- 商業
Martin Lewis answers your financial questions, offering valuable money-saving tips.
-
Credit Cards back2basics | How credit scoring really works | Insider flight tips | Top Savings & More
Martin explains everything you need to know about credit cards, tips on the best buy easy access accounts (one is normal savings, one is a cash ISA) and hotel and flight booking advice in the Tell Us.
-
Can you challenge rent rises? And more renter's rights, from repairs, damp to pets & disputes…
The ‘Not The Martin Lewis’ Podcast: Where Martin asks specialists your questions.
-
Pre-Election FREE cash bank giveaways | Do you pay tax on state pension | Cheap Weddings
Martin explains if you have to pay tax on your pension. Banks which are currently willing to pay you to switch, just six weeks ago there were none, so this is a lucrative time to look at your banking.
And we hear your budget wedding stories, explaining how to keep the cost down. -
Bonus Mini-Pod: Energy Price Cap 7% fall – the good, the bad, the ugly
It’s a bonus mini episode as Martin explains what the newly announced Ofgem energy price cap for July means for you – and why there could be bad news in store for October.
-
Cheapest way to spend abroad | How inflation cut will hit mortgages & savings | Time to fix energy
Martin looks at the cheapest ways to spend money abroad, reflects on the impact of the fall in inflation and discusses the quarterly energy price cap update.
And you ‘Tell Us’ when you’ve complained and won.
This episode was recorded on lunchtime on 22nd May 2024 – shortly before the General Election date was confirmed. -
The Money-Festo: How to improve Britain including shrinkflation, term-time holidays, tax-cuts for downsizers and more…
Martin hears your ‘money-festo’ ideas – if you could change one consumer law or rule, what would it be – and why?
He and Nihal are joined by former government adviser and policy expert Polly MacKenzie – to assess how practical the suggestions are – as our very own “Polly-filter”.
Could we regulate shrinkflation, give parents that chance to book term-time holidays, offer tax-cuts for downsizers, or make the morning commute tax deductible? And would any of those ideas actually work?