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Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Back to this loan!!!! please please please someone help me a solicitor, financial advisor or ex Lloyds tsb employee!!! I have a loan for �12004 i pay �257 a month the APR is 11.9% (yeh i know) it is comprised of 207 payment and 50 pounds loan protection a month. They gave me the loan even though i only earn 640 pound a month (I live with my partner therefore i survive) But have they given this loan to me illegally and broken rules as quite clearly with the cost of living i cannot afford to pay this loan back. its over 6 years 5 to go. i went in today for a settlement and they quoted me 11836 pounds STILL to pay. i was quoted on signing up for this loan that "lloyds tsb loans are not front loaded with interest" this looks to me like it is, as i have only paid �168 off of my loan of �12004 in 1 year. I can quite clearly see i'm being done over but 5 years of only paying �168 off of my loan does not make me �12004. Please help me so i am armed with some advice to hit them with when i go in to query it.
thank you
No best answer has yet been selected by penniless. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As a person who works for a bank (not TSB however) I would surmise that you were perhaps lended the money irresponsibly. Where I have worked, before credit score is taken into account, first and foremost affordability must be there! However if you told them at the time that you lived with your partner and paid no rent or lodgings and paid no other loans then you may be at a disadvantage.
Anyway, firstly APR is not the most accurate method to compare the cost of loans as it can be calculated in approximately 50 different ways, so ask what your flat rate of interest is to gain a true idea. Secondly when a loan is set up, the interest may not be front-loaded, but when you make a payment a certain percentage will go to interest and the remainder to the capital (the amount you borrowed). If your loan is on a fixed rate, the interest rate will never change, but the amount you pay off the capital will increase as the interest will become continually lower through the course of the loan as it will be in relation to the capital still owed. Basically you will get a fright if you ask for a settlement figure when only a short term through the loan.
With regard to loan protection, it is quite possible that this will be front loaded as it is a seperate item paid for by additional funds quite commonly at the same rate as the loan. Under the FSA regulations, if you were to pay the loan off early you would be entitled to a refund of the loan protection you have not used if indeed the premium amound was front loaded.
In response to Jean88, commonly loan protection will cover sickness, accident, redundancy, life and critical illness.
Most will not cover sickness caused by what is termed to be a pre-existing medical condition i.e one that the policy holder knew about before cover started. Also many will require the sickness period to be for more than 30 consecutive days, so being off work through a cold or flu for a couple of weeks are unlikely to be covered. Life cover will not pay out for anything caused by the policy holder's own willful actions (suicide), drug or alchohol abuse.
The exact details are dependent on the wording of the particular policy.