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    • Oil and gold prices have jumped, while shares have fallen.View the full article
    • Thank you for your reply, DX! I was not under the impression that paying it off would remove it from my file. My file is already trashed so it would make very little difference to any credit score. I am not certain if I can claim compensation for a damaged credit score though. Or for them reporting incorrect information for over 10 years? The original debt has been reported since 2013 as an EE debt even though they had sold it in 2014. It appears to be a breach of the Data Protection Act 1998 Section 13 and this all should have come to a head when I paid the £69 in September 2022, or so I thought. The £69 was in addition to the original outstanding balance and not sent to a DCA. Even if I had paid the full balance demanded by the DCA back in 2014 then the £69 would still have been outstanding with EE. If it turns out I have no claim then so be it. Sometimes there's not always a claim if there's blame. The CRA's will not give any reason for not removing it. They simply say it is not their information and refer me to EE. More to the point EE had my updated details since 2022 yet failed to contact me. I have been present on the electoral roll since 2012 so was traceable and I think EE have been negligent in reporting an account as in payment arrangement when in fact it had been sold to a DCA. In my mind what should have happened was the account should have been defaulted before it was closed and sold to the DCA who would then have made a new entry on my credit file with the correct details. However, a further £69 of charges were applied AFTER it was sent to the DCA and it was left open on EE systems. The account was then being reported twice. Once with EE as open with a payment arrangement for the £69 balance which has continued since 2013 and once with the DCA who reported it as defaulted in 2014 and it subsequently dropped off and was written off by the DCA, LOWELL in 2021. I am quite happy for EE to place a closed account on my credit file, marked as satisfied. However, it is clear to me that them reporting an open account with payment arrangement when the balance is £0 and the original debt has been written off is incorrect? Am I wrong?
    • OMG! I Know! .... someone here with a chance to sue Highview for breach of GDPR with a very good chance of winning, I was excited reading it especially after all the work put in by site members and thinking he could hammer them for £££'s and then, the OP disappeared half way through. Although you never know the reason so all I can say is I hope the OP is alive and well regardless. I'd relish the chance to do them for that if they breached my GDPR.
    • The streaming giant also said it added 9.3 million subscribers in the first three months of the year.View the full article
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What happens when you retire if you rent privately?


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Just a quick question. If you have to sell your house then you dont qualify for council help and so have to, or choose to, rent from a private landlord. The rent is around 550 and so affordably whilst working but what happens when you retire and your income drops rapidly. Are you going to find yourself homeless or would you be able to get help?

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When renting privately you may be entitled to Housing Benefit, regardless of age or work status. HB is an income- assessed benefit. If you are UK resident and have savings below certain level, you can apply and be awarded some payments towards your rent. These payments can be made directly to you, so the landlord doesn't have to be involved.

Please see for selection of links about HB:

Advicenow: independent law and rights advice, legal service providers, advice service alliance, UK - Search

 

Please do not dismiss the idea of getting help from the council just because you have sold your home. Get further advice from Community Legal Advice about your housing.

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Thank you JOA. At the moment it wouldny apply but I was just wondering what would happen in the future. Our house is for sale so we can get rid of the morgage and secured loan which are crippling us. We will be able to rent somewhere decent and still be better off each month. We have been looking at some of the new build apartments in the area and they are fantastic. What worries me is that in 10 years when I reach retirement age we will be managing on other halfs wage. (He is younger than me by 11 years so will be working after me although I hope to be able to carry on working for as lond as poss) My brother is disabled and unable to work and lost his home 8 months ago. He has found a place to rent but because he is on benefits the place is the pits but all he can afford.

 

I guess what Im really asking is. When the time comes where the rent may be unmanagable on our income and we apply for benefit could they turn round and say 'you can rent cheaper than that so find somewhere else' or, do they take it that as you have been renting long term and that is your home you can expect to stay put. We have been looking at the new build because if we rent a private house we may have to move on in a few years if they want to sell or use the property themselves. If we go into purpose built new flats then hopefully we could put down roots long term. I just dont want to find myself having to leave when our incone drops at retirement.

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If i were you, I would hold on to property you own for as long as heavenly possible. This is because the security of standard tenancy is never great. You may find yourself having to move every 6 or 12 months (the standard tenancy periods) and there is no such thing as "putting your roots down" once you are a tenant. Please re-think your options carefully. Having to move, never knowing what in next 6 months, arguing over deposits, disrepairs etc not a future I would wish on anybody.

But if you have to move, and you apply for Housing Benefit, you will be assessed on your income and savings, which will be then compared to "local reference rent". LRR may be lower then your actual rent if your accommodation is more expensive then the average in your locality. The Rent Officers who seem to be oblivious to property market prices explosion decide what is appropriate local average rent. The outcome is that the assessment for benefit may not calculated on your real rent but on the LRR, leaving you to pick up the difference.

Often though the LRR equals the actual rent.

Please check this link for more info:

DWP - Advisers - Technical guidance - RR2 - What you can claim for

and promise me you think verrrry carefully before you sell your home.

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Thanks Joa.

 

We have thought long and hard about it but there dosnt seem to be any option. We have a morgage and secured loan on it (we should NEVER have taken the loan out but hindsight is a wonderful thing and I hadnt found this site then!) The payments are crippling us every month and we have also got other debts and people threatening to put charges on the house and force us to sell. At the moment we are struggling to make every payment on the house and have had a repossession hearing , the outcome was a suspeded order as long as we keep paying. The thing is that if we sold and then rented we would be about 300 a month better off. I really dont want to let the house go but cant see an alternative.

Also, I divorced my ex and now live with a new partner who is 11 years younger than me so the morgage has only been running 7 years and so will be round our necks till Im nearly 70. I cant see a way round this without selling, not if we are ever to have any quality of life again.

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  • 10 years later...

I can really identify with the OP. I know this is an old thread and I hope it all worked out for her.

 

I am now in that position, having sold the house which had a charging order & with a pending forced sale, I had to sell my home very quickly.

 

There wasn't enough equity left over to buy anything else and given my age, & debts, no hope of another mortgage.

 

I was able to buy a small piece of land, though, which had B1 use... I thought I'd rent for a year whilst setting up a business & this income would eventually pay the rent.

 

However, there have been problems, re planning permission, so here I am with not very much left in the kitty and where outgoings are exceeding my & my husband's incomes from state pensions.

 

We have been paying the rent in advance, as this was the only way we could find anywhere to live. When we sold our house we paid the landlord 6 months up front, followed by another 6 months rental back in October. In 6 weeks time the rent will be due again, but this time we lack the funds to pay as our savings are about to run out.

 

I need to hold onto some money for fees for the planning application & then hopefully, if all goes well, I can work towards supporting myself in my retirement.

 

It may be that we can claim pension credit and housing/council tax benefit, being as we have so little to live on, so I guess that is the best place to start... otherwise, no idea what happens at the end of March, when the tenancy needs renewing.

 

Many thanks for listening!

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