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Hi can someone please help me. Ntl have been charging me £4 per month for not paying my bill by direct debit.I have seen somewhere on this site someone else claiming against them for this. How do I go about finding how much they have charged me over the past few years,and how do I go about claiming this back.

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Seems a reasonable charge to me. DD is automated so costs them a lot less; they levy this charge to cover the extra admin involved in handling manual payments (and also the charges they pay for taking card payments which will be higher than DD). I can't see this being held as unfair.

 

T-Mobile charge me £3 a month for this and I have no reason to complain.

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they levy this charge to cover the extra admin involved in handling manual payments (and also the charges they pay for taking card payments which will be higher than DD). I can't see this being held as unfair.

 

As far as I'm aware, that must mean it take approximately 40 minutes to do the admin. Anyway, ntl don't do "manual payments" - if you pay by card, you go through their automated system, and I can't see them paying the computer £6/hr. We already know the approximate cost of the card payment is less than 50p (IKEA is good for something), and the marginal cost to NTL for processing lots of card payments is probably less than this again. In my mind, it's still a penalty for not paying by Direct Debit (I would pay by Direct Debit if I could trust them to bill me correctly in the first place!), and I've deducted it from my settlement offer to them.

HSBCLloyds TSBcontractual interestNew Tax Creditscoming for you?NTL/Virgin Media

 

Never give in ... Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. Churchill, 1941

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It may not work though if they have phrased it as they give you a £4 discount if you pay by DD - that way you are not being charged for not using DD

 

Unfortunately, that's rather like telling someone that if they drop their complaint you'll allow them to continue without having their lights punched out. I can't see why it would make a difference - there is a difference in the amounts charged that does not reflect the difference in cost of processing, and is not reflected in a difference in the level of service provided. Hence, the difference must constitute a penalty for not using their preferred method of payment.

 

On my business account, the difference is 50p per transaction.

 

... which is not exactly £4, is it? :)

HSBCLloyds TSBcontractual interestNew Tax Creditscoming for you?NTL/Virgin Media

 

Never give in ... Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. Churchill, 1941

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Unfortunately, that's rather like telling someone that if they drop their complaint you'll allow them to continue without having their lights punched out.

 

Well its quite a bit different its kinda like a photo developing place saying if you want your photos processed by 4pm thats £5 if done by next week its £3.

 

They can give a 'discount' for any reason they want including for paying by a different method.

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Well its quite a bit different its kinda like a photo developing place saying if you want your photos processed by 4pm thats £5 if done by next week its £3.

 

That's different. That's an actual difference in the level of service provided. You pay the extra £2 because you want to pick up your photos after work instead of waiting. It's rather different to having to pay the extra £2 because you want to use your card. Because of the charges levied by various places we know what a reasonable charge for paying by card or cheque is, and we know it's not £4. If you use a card for a transation under £5/10 in your local Spar, you might end up paying 50p. IKEA IIRC charges something like 50-75p (I forget the actual figure) for credit card purchases. Even my local pizza delivery will take a cheque for 50p.

 

There's no actual difference in the service when you pay by DD or card (apart from having to sit through their automated telephone system to do the payment - and I'd not expect to have to pay to put myself through extra trouble).

 

It's arguably a penalty for paying by their preferred method, because the difference is considerably more than the marginal costs to them. If they were willing to disclose the actual cost of processing 1000 DDs and then the cost of making 1000 payments, I'd be happy to pay 1/1000 of the difference - but they won't, so I'm not. It's paying for the privilege of paying - as I mentioned, a doorman could argue that he is letting you leave the premises without a punch in the face, whereas a better interpretation is that it is a veiled threat of battery. The important part is that it can be argued either way, so if you already have an issue with them (late payment fees, service charges because they failed to move you out, etc.) then it's worth going for.

HSBCLloyds TSBcontractual interestNew Tax Creditscoming for you?NTL/Virgin Media

 

Never give in ... Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. Churchill, 1941

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There's no actual difference in the service when you pay by DD or card (apart from having to sit through their automated telephone system to do the payment - and I'd not expect to have to pay to put myself through extra trouble).

 

.

 

Payment by DD is fully automated. Once it has been input, there is no further human intervention until or unless it changes.

 

Payment by cheque involves human interaction to open, read, credit and pass the cheque for processing by the bank. The people employed to do this would not be employed if nobody paid by cheque. They have a significant cost to NTL. NTL's bank make a transaction scharge per cheque.

 

I have never attempted to pay by card over the 'phone, but I wiuld assume that at some point you talk to a human being. As above, these people would not be employed if nobody paid by this method. There are transaction charges levied by the banks for card payments.

 

So the extra cost of not using DD are significantly more than the transaction charges levied by the banks.

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Payment by DD is fully automated. Once it has been input, there is no further human intervention until or unless it changes.

 

But that doesn't reflect in the level of service I receive.

 

Payment by cheque involves human interaction to open, read, credit and pass the cheque for processing by the bank. The people employed to do this would not be employed if nobody paid by cheque. They have a significant cost to NTL. NTL's bank make a transaction scharge per cheque.

 

The total cost may be significant, but given they probably have a considerable number of customers who haven't yet been bullied into using DD, the marginal cost is more than likely insignificant.

 

I have never attempted to pay by card over the 'phone, but I wiuld assume that at some point you talk to a human being.

 

You would think so, but you don't. It's an automated system. Maybe human intervention is required at the end to sign off the transaction, but this can be done in bulk by the cheque handlers at the end of the day.

 

So the extra cost of not using DD are significantly more than the transaction charges levied by the banks.

 

The total cost (i.e. the overall cost of the extra people, and the transaction charges) might be, but the marginal cost (i.e. the cost of n+1 over n) will be minimal.

HSBCLloyds TSBcontractual interestNew Tax Creditscoming for you?NTL/Virgin Media

 

Never give in ... Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. Churchill, 1941

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customers who haven't yet been bullied into using DD

 

Why bullied? I pay by DD because it is much more convenient and cheaper.

 

The total cost (i.e. the overall cost of the extra people, and the transaction charges) might be, but the marginal cost (i.e. the cost of n+1 over n) will be minimal.

 

Marginal cost would be irrelevant; you need average cost. I can imagine them being able to justify an average cost of payment processing being split between non-DD customers as being £2-4 quite easily.

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Why bullied? I pay by DD because it is much more convenient and cheaper.

 

I would pay by DD if they would get my bills right in the first place :mad:

HSBCLloyds TSBcontractual interestNew Tax Creditscoming for you?NTL/Virgin Media

 

Never give in ... Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. Churchill, 1941

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  • 1 month later...
Guest HUSBANDKHAN

telewesat charge you £10 every time they switch you off due to non payment same company same rules ? suppose could chase them for this couldnt 1 ?

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I think you will find that what they actually say....is that they give you a discount for paying by direct debits!

 

Unfortunately, that is not how it is reflected on your bill. It is not "DIRECT DEBIT DISCOUNT £4.00CR", you get "NON DIRECT DEBIT HANDLNG FEE £4.00", therefore their argument that it's a discount goes out the window. As for being a service charge, SOGASA says it must be "reasonable", but payment isn't a service they provide us, it's a service we provide to them. Therefore, it is a penalty for not wanting to be bullied into allowing them direct access to your bank account. It would be a very different story if (1) the DDG was actually respected (2) they got the billing right in the first place.

HSBCLloyds TSBcontractual interestNew Tax Creditscoming for you?NTL/Virgin Media

 

Never give in ... Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. Churchill, 1941

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Don't forget we're not just talking about cheque and card payments here; we're talking about fully automated Standing Orders too... the difference is, with Direct Debit, their computer comes into your bank account and takes whatever the hell it likes. With Standing Order, Your bank contacts their computer and says "Here's what I'm willing to give you".

 

They charge £4 for standing order because they're not in control. When someone becomes a heavy debtor, and they decide to up your payments, they can do so automatically with direct debit so long as they give you a notice period. With standing order they have to ask you to change it at your end.

 

I hate D/D but I'm not willing to pay the surcharge for not using it. If I ever get into significant financial trouble I'll pay another way.

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I'm surprised you're not making a stand on this. They have yet to show that it actually costs them £4 to process any other payment type, and when challenged, rebate it. I don;t pay by DD and I don't pay the charge - perhaps you should benefit in the same way?

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I posted a thread exactly like this on NTL a couple of months ago.

 

I have settled it with NTL to my satisfaction

 

ANYBODY who finds any justification in this tax should not be on this board, because they do not support the choice of the consumer, and they are gullible enough to believe the poor logic of companies which are violating the right of choice in their customers.

 

We have the same group of people posting here to this thread, some with ignorance, others who have not listened to the poster.

 

point 1 - There is NO DD DISCOUNT, just a tax of 4 pound if you dont do it their way. That amounts to a company bullying us, not bribing us to think their way.

 

Point 2 - When did a company have the right to start charging us for the inconvenience of accepting our payments.If we accept this, whats next, I pay a surcharge for the electrical signals going into my cable box, I pay a surcharge for the NTL staff taking sick days?

 

Point 3 - Every time I spoke to NTL staff they told me all of the other companies are doing this too. I asked them if they had ever tried telling a police officer that they were not the only ones speeding on the motorway, and that there are others going faster. At that time NTL people had a long pause, then transferred me to somebody else. Their training does not involve witty responses to real life logic.

 

After many phone calls I spoke to the disconnection people asking to disconnect me if they couldnt remove my non DD charges. At that time it was 30 pounds of backdated charges.

 

in the absence of any real legal defence of our position, the best response seems to be to ring the company and tell them you want to be disconnected. That still works.

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I don't have the emotional bandwidth for it right now.
:shock:

 

I never thought I'd see the day! As Biggsy points out, NTL will - if challenged - rebate this fee. I'm currently taking Sky to court for not agreeing to do the same, its just a pity that any positive result there will not establish a precedent, but sites like these do empower those that hate being taken for fools!

 

(I only take issue with the desciption of this being a 'Tax'. This is a bad move, sure we don't like taxes but there's not much we can do about them). We CAN do something about non-DD fees, so what would be a more realistic term for them - that it at least printable?

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ANYBODY who finds any justification in this tax should not be on this board, because they do not support the choice of the consumer, and they are gullible enough to believe the poor logic of companies which are violating the right of choice in their customers.

 

Strong words, and showing a hostility that we usually don't like around here. I can see a justification - it costs them more to handle non-DD payments. My objection is not entirely with the principle, but with the amount. £48 over the course of a year is not a fair price to pay for payment not using Direct Debit. £24, as it was, was pushing it somewhat. A fee of £1 per month would however seem reasonable for some methods of payment, especially cheques - for most transactions, they can consolidate to recude their costs, but their bank will charge them for each cheque paid in, to the sum of around 40-50p. £1 for cheque payments seems reasonable to cover that and contribute to staffing costs.

 

Every time I spoke to NTL staff they told me all of the other companies are doing this too. I asked them if they had ever tried telling a police officer that they were not the only ones speeding on the motorway, and that there are others going faster. At that time NTL people had a long pause, then transferred me to somebody else.

 

If you're caught for speeding several times in succession, it is a perfectly reasonable argument to suggest you're being picked on. I cut this line off by instead using murder as the example (since a mass-murderer can hardly complain of discrimination).

 

in the absence of any real legal defence of our position, the best response seems to be to ring the company and tell them you want to be disconnected. That still works.

 

There is a legal basis - UTCCR says they cannot penalise you to a disproportionate amount, and SOGASA says that any service they provide must come at a "fair and reasonable" price. That is if they try the old line that accepting your payment is a service they provide - if it were a service, we could just get everything for free by insisting on not making use of this additional service.

HSBCLloyds TSBcontractual interestNew Tax Creditscoming for you?NTL/Virgin Media

 

Never give in ... Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. Churchill, 1941

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I'm surprised you're not making a stand on this. They have yet to show that it actually costs them £4 to process any other payment type, and when challenged, rebate it. I don;t pay by DD and I don't pay the charge - perhaps you should benefit in the same way?

Hi okonsky new member here.

i'm interested in your comments about making a stand against d/debit charge.

 

I hate paying this tax so i'm all ears as to what action to take even to pull the plug on them

 

regards

den

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Hi okonsky new member here.

i'm interested in your comments about making a stand against d/debit charge.

 

I hate paying this tax so i'm all ears as to what action to take even to pull the plug on them

 

regards

den

 

Easy - work out how much you've paid the fee (I let them away with it at £2 as the price of doing business with them, but when it went up to £4, I reacted against it). Call Customer Services on 150 and say you are unhappy that the company is charging you £48 extra per year simply because you'de been taught how to manage your affairs in a responsible manner - and the news of Banks, Building Societies and the rest emptying accounts because of so-called computer 'errors'. When the staff member explains that's it, and there's nothing they can do - say it's a shame and that you'd like to give notice that you're leaving.

 

You'll then be transferred to the 'Disconnections' (actually 'Retentions' department). You'll have to go through the same palaver explaining why you're leaving, but do it politely and you'll be offered the refundas a credit to your bill, probably just 3 months (£12) with the recommendation you call back the same departmant for a similar credit. It's a pain, but to save £50 a year, I have each period marked on my calendar, and it works well!

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