Egg loans
Loading… |
|
Egg offers personal loans of £1,000 to £25,000 with repayments over six months to seven years.
Customers are also allowed pay off the loan early, make lump sum payments or increase monthly repayments without charge.
- Valuation for secured loans – Your questions answered
- The cheapest eight personal loans for 2013
- M&S breaks the mould and cuts rates on low value personal loans
- Yorkshire Building Society acquires Egg savings and mortgages
- Tesco reduce rates on personal loans
Loans and Credit News
UK government borrowing set to rise for third consecutive yearUnderlying government borrowing still went up in May once the one-off receipts of £3.2bn from Swiss tax authorities is stripped out of the figures. |
FSB: Osborne must capitalise on increased business confidenceA new report by the Federation of Small Businesses says that while confidence amongst businesses is improving, the Chancellor must use the Spending Review to capitalise on this. |
Ernst & Young ITEM Club predicts consumer spending revivalA new report from the Ernst & Young ITEM Club predicts that increased confidence, lower taxes and a growing property market will help drive forward consumer spending. |
University of Northampton bans payday loan advertisingThe National Union of Students is urging all universities to follow the lead of Northampton and ban all payday loan firms from advertising on campus. |
Rise in theft of bank cards as fraudsters return to basicsA new report shows a trebling of incidences in which bank cards are stolen after identifying pin numbers as the introduction of chip-and-pin technology causes fraudsters to return to old methods. |
Age UK warns of growing number of older people in problem debtAge UK has published a new study warning of the increasing number of older people approaching retirement with problem debts that can lead to relationship breakdown. |
Mortgage lending boom comes at expense of business lendingThe Bank of England report mortgage approvals went up to a 4-month high but business lending fell by £3 billion in April and consumer credit saw the smallest increase since January. |
OFT "ineffective and timid" in controlling payday lendersThe Office of Fair Trading has been "ineffective and timid" in controlling the activities of payday lenders, according to MPs on the Public Accounts Committee. |
Reviews