ChatterBank33 mins ago
Quick Quid
12 Answers
I read the previous questions in "Adverts" about Quick Quid and their excorbitant Interest Rates. I borrowed £400.00 back in March and was due to repay it at the end of the month. Unfortunately I was unable to do this and therefore asked for an extension.
This was given to me. I was being called by a call centre in America and they were very pleasant to deal with.
To cut a long story short, I was offered a final settlement figure of £201.00 and this was paid yesterday.
This may sound unbelievable but it is true. They leant me £400 for 4 mon ths and I only had to pay them back £201.00!! I even received an e mail offering me another loan this morning. I won't be taking the offer up though.
Exorbitant Interest Rates?? Not in my experience. Any thoughts?
This was given to me. I was being called by a call centre in America and they were very pleasant to deal with.
To cut a long story short, I was offered a final settlement figure of £201.00 and this was paid yesterday.
This may sound unbelievable but it is true. They leant me £400 for 4 mon ths and I only had to pay them back £201.00!! I even received an e mail offering me another loan this morning. I won't be taking the offer up though.
Exorbitant Interest Rates?? Not in my experience. Any thoughts?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by chrissa1. 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.You’re mentioning APR, so I want to clarify what APR means in terms of a cash advance.
APR stands for annual percentage rate. Annual means one year. So APR is describing how much a loan would cost if the loan was borrowed for an entire year. QuickQuid only lends short-term loans. Short-term loans are typically borrowed for four weeks. The law (Consumer Credit Act 1974) requires QuickQuid to list the APR simply for the fact that it’s a financial product, but APR really has nothing to do with a four-week loan. Yes, the APR is high, but if you take the time to find out how much a loan actually costs, I think you’d be surprised.
Here’s how it works:
If you borrow £100 from QuickQuid for four weeks or one pay period, the maximum amount you could be charged is £29.50. If you borrow £200, you’d be charged £59. Borrow £300 – charged £88.50. So you can see that though the APR listed is very high, the actual cost of a cash advance isn’t so high.
APR stands for annual percentage rate. Annual means one year. So APR is describing how much a loan would cost if the loan was borrowed for an entire year. QuickQuid only lends short-term loans. Short-term loans are typically borrowed for four weeks. The law (Consumer Credit Act 1974) requires QuickQuid to list the APR simply for the fact that it’s a financial product, but APR really has nothing to do with a four-week loan. Yes, the APR is high, but if you take the time to find out how much a loan actually costs, I think you’d be surprised.
Here’s how it works:
If you borrow £100 from QuickQuid for four weeks or one pay period, the maximum amount you could be charged is £29.50. If you borrow £200, you’d be charged £59. Borrow £300 – charged £88.50. So you can see that though the APR listed is very high, the actual cost of a cash advance isn’t so high.
Thanks avalentine but it still sounds expensive to me.
To pay a charge of £59 for borrowing £200 for 4 weeks seems a lot to me. If your finances mean you have to resort to borrowing money this way one month there is a fair chance you'll need to borrow again next month too. The costs would soon build up. If every time you want to spend £200 it really costs you £259 you will have a very expensive cost of living.
And the real trouble can start if you can't repay.
However, I can see it isn't too bad if it's genuinely a one-off, all other avenues of funding some essential expenditure have been exhausted and you are guaranteed to have more than enough money coming in in future to prevent the need for further loans.
To pay a charge of £59 for borrowing £200 for 4 weeks seems a lot to me. If your finances mean you have to resort to borrowing money this way one month there is a fair chance you'll need to borrow again next month too. The costs would soon build up. If every time you want to spend £200 it really costs you £259 you will have a very expensive cost of living.
And the real trouble can start if you can't repay.
However, I can see it isn't too bad if it's genuinely a one-off, all other avenues of funding some essential expenditure have been exhausted and you are guaranteed to have more than enough money coming in in future to prevent the need for further loans.
Yes, but how doi I check it out? I've been told that I was offered a "settlement figure" and that everything was ok.
I agree that they are trying to suck me in to borrow more and more, which won't work by the way. I spoke to 3 different operatives and they all agreed that a settlement figure had been offered and accepted. If it IS a mistake I should find out at the end of the month when reminders are issued via e mail.
Like the bit about "lending" Them the money. Ha.
I agree that they are trying to suck me in to borrow more and more, which won't work by the way. I spoke to 3 different operatives and they all agreed that a settlement figure had been offered and accepted. If it IS a mistake I should find out at the end of the month when reminders are issued via e mail.
Like the bit about "lending" Them the money. Ha.
-- answer removed --