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Bits: HMRC to stop accepting prepaid cards, get 25% off selected Etihad redemptions

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News in brief:

HMRC to change the rules on accepting credit and debit cards

When pay.com cards were still available, using them to pay any HMRC liabilities was smart.  They were treated as a debit card, so you saved the 1.4% HMRC fee, but you could buy them with a credit card.  If you bought them in Tesco, you also picked up a lot of Clubcard points.

The ‘fee paid’ Visa gift cards which you can buy in some Tesco stores can still be used for this purpose.  If you have some Tesco ‘conditional spend’ coupons – I was sent £9 off a £60 spend recently – it is worth buying them, especially as every £50 purchase earns you 150 Clubcard points.

From January 1st, the rules will change.

To quote from the HMRC website:

From 1 January 2016, HMRC will limit the number of times you can use a credit or debit card within a certain time to pay your tax. The rules apply to multiple card payments against the same tax – you can only make extra card payments if each one’s for a different tax, eg Corporation Tax and employers’ PAYE. If you’re unable to pay your VAT bill in full by card, you should use another payment method like a bank transfer.”

The only logical reason to do this would be stop the use of prepaid Visa and Mastercard products.

You should note that the credit card fee has also increased to 1.5%.  This seems ludicrous given that the new EU rules capping interchange fees at 0.3% come into effect next year.

Etihad 350

25% off selected Etihad redemptions

Etihad Guest is offering 25% off some redemptions if you book before 25th November.  The snag is that the travel window is ludicrously tight – you need to fly out by the end of November and return by 10th December.

You can see the routes which are covered here.  Dublin and London are reduced for Economy redemptions whilst Manchester is reduced for First Class redemptions.  If you are travelling beyond Abu Dhabi, you would also need to see if your eventual destination was included.

The small print contains a couple of nasty surprises.  It claims that these redemptions would be non-refundable (although less of a worry given the short travel window) and that you cannot combine it with the generous Etihad ‘cash and miles’ payment option.

I find the whole promotion a bit odd, to be honest, as a 25% discount (to a very limited list of destinations) is not enough to encourage you to literally drop everything and fly.  If you have a redemption already booked, however, it may be worth changing it.


How to earn Etihad Guest miles from UK credit cards

How to earn Etihad Guest miles from UK credit cards (April 2024)

Etihad Guest does not have a UK credit card.  However, you can earn Etihad Guest miles by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards.

Cards earning Membership Rewards points include:

Membership Rewards points convert at 1:1 into Etihad Guest miles which is an attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 1 Etihad Guest mile. The Gold card earns double points (2 per £1) on all flights you charge to it.

Comments (52)

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  • Peter K says:

    What a Shame. I’d just devised a way to actually make money from paying off my tax bill using paid visa cards. Never mind, it’s a moot point now :-/

  • harry says:

    O/t nice article here http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/money-saving-tips/12007549/Now-you-can-charter-a-private-jet-to-Europe-for-less-than-500.html

    Now you can charter a private jet to Europe for less than £500

    Flight sharing and empty leg booking services for private air travel have opened up a whole new world to travellers looking for a premium experience

    James Connington
    By James Connington

    4:58PM GMT 20 Nov 2015

    New services have brought the price of private air travel down below the £500 mark, with a flight to Geneva possible for as little as £310 per person.

    For the vast majority of people, private jets don’t even factor into the equation when booking a holiday, with such extravagance presumed to be the territory of movie stars and Silicon Valley billionaires.

    Flying private means no lines for security or customs, flying into a wider range of airports, and flexible departure times, but normally comes at an exorbitant cost.

    However, thanks to flight sharing and empty leg booking services, the cost of chartering a private jet is becoming more comparable to business and first class commercial pricing.

    A number of companies have sprung up to accommodate those who want to go the extra mile for their holiday or business trip, but don’t have the means required to book full price charters.

    Telegraph Travel Awards, Private Jet to Jersey
    A private jet to Jersey for four, including a unique “three-course three-venue” Michelin star lunch experience.

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    One such company is private jet charter website Victor, who offer an empty leg flight booking service.

    An empty leg flight is where private aircraft have been booked one way only, so have to make the return flight with no passengers – these flights can then be sold on to others at a discount. Although the departure times aren’t flexible, up to 75pc can be saved according to Victor.

    At the time of writing, their website shows 30 available empty leg flights, ranging from as little as £310 per person for a light jet from Geneva to London, up to £1,579 per person from Los Angeles to Hawaii on New Year’s Day.

    A one way first class commercial flight from Los Angeles to Hawaii on the same day would cost anywhere from £500 to over £1,000 depending on the airline used.

    That would mean flying outbound on the chartered flight and returning first class could potentially only cost an extra £500. A traveller willing to fly back in economy could negate the extra cost of the charter aircraft entirely.

  • Jason says:

    Does anyone know, in regards to etihad miles expiring after 2 years, whether you need to spend the miles within 2 years of have travelled within 2 years?

  • Joe Heptonstall says:

    I just went into a tesco store and they charge £3.95 for each £50 prepaid visa gift card.

    I have a huge tax bill to pay now and hoped to do it this way but need to get free one paid visa cards for it to be worth it.

    Can someone please advise

    Thank you

    • Rob says:

      The free ones no longer exist in Tesco unfortunately.

      • Joe Heptonstall says:

        Are there any free ones at any other stores or online shops, or more to the point, What’s the best way to pay a large tax bill whilst trying to earn as many points as possible. Thanks so much

    • Tilly71 says:

      A lot of people only buy the £3.95 fee visa cards if they can use a conditional spend coupon sent through the post which in most cases pays for the fees attached.
      E.g. I purchased two £50 Visa cards this week, used a £10 off coupon so was still £2.10 up and 500 clubcard points in total by using two of the new magazine coupons, just used both cards to credit my eon account online.
      Next week I have a £7.00 off coupon, I will use this against another two cards costing me £1.00 for another 500 cc points and I will repeat in week 3.
      If you have no conditional spend coupons, if you use a mag coupon you will still get 250 cc points for £3.95.

      • mark2 says:

        250cc points translates to at least 600 Avios

        • harry says:

          Yep even without conditional spend discounts you might try it multiple times provided you had the patience. Eg with a 2 point Amex card, + unlimited catalogues, the £3.95 fee (1x £50) means 700 Avios ie 300 Avios for free.

          Do this 20 times to pay a few bills, you’ve got 6000 free Avios.

          Not for me, time vs reward, though a conditional spend would swing it.

  • harry says:

    ‘From 1 January 2016, HMRC will limit the number of times you can use a credit or debit card within a certain time to pay your tax.

    There isn’t a set limit – it depends on HMRC’s view of what’s reasonable based on payment card industry standards and guidance.’

    So if you want to buy paid Visa giftcards and put the total on 1 card, would that work? Let’s assume you regularly get conditional spend discounts & want to build up a decent card total.

    150 points for £50 = 360 Avios = £3.60
    plus you get another 50/100 Avios for the purchase.

    You MIGHT be able to justify it if you get said conditional spend discounts but for HMRC purposes it depends on whether you can add many cards together & do 1 transaction.

  • Raj says:

    What would be the best way to pay a 10000 tax bill ?

    • Rob says:

      Debit card. You won’t have a credit card which covers a 1.5 per cent fee from the rewards.

  • GB says:

    Anyone having problems entering prepaid visa cards into HRMC? It was working this morning but now getting “payment unsuccessful”

  • Leigh says:

    Same here. Only the first one went through ok. Is the limit in place alreday?

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