Debt & Credit Guides
Use these when you are comparing repayment routes, borrowing costs, promotional deals, credit scores or the true cost of keeping debt for longer.
Browse debt guidesThis hub brings together the site’s decision-focused guides in one place so you can start with the question you are trying to answer, not just the calculator you happen to find first. It covers debt, savings, mortgages and tax in plain English, using UK terminology and practical examples that connect directly to the tools across the site.
Use it when you want more context before running numbers. That might mean understanding whether overpaying debt beats saving, how take-home pay is worked out, what changes the real cost of buying a home, or how much emergency savings you actually need. Each section below groups the guides by topic so you can move through them logically.
The content here is general information for a UK audience, not personalised financial advice. Rates, thresholds and lender terms can change, so any important decision should be checked against up-to-date information before you act.
Start with the topic that matches the decision you are actually making.
Use these when you are comparing repayment routes, borrowing costs, promotional deals, credit scores or the true cost of keeping debt for longer.
Browse debt guidesUse these when you are deciding how much to save, where to keep cash, how emergency funds should work and how to stay consistent over time.
Browse savings guidesUse these when you want to understand mortgage payments, overpayments, fixed versus variable deals, deposits and the rent-versus-buy trade-off.
Browse property guidesUse these when you need a clearer picture of tax bands, payslips, salary sacrifice, National Insurance and self-employed tax basics.
Browse tax guidesThe best next step depends on whether you need context first or numbers first.
Start by identifying the actual decision. If you are asking how much to save, whether debt should come before savings, or whether a mortgage deal is really affordable, you usually need a short explanation before a calculator becomes useful. That is what these guides are for.
Once the decision is clearer, move into the linked tool and use your own numbers. That usually means taking what you have learned about rates, fees, tax bands, monthly affordability or repayment timelines and then pressure-testing it with the calculator that matches the guide.
Finally, compare outcomes across topics when the decision overlaps more than one area. Many real-world choices are not isolated. A mortgage decision can affect savings, tax and debt capacity at the same time, so moving between related guides usually gives a better answer than treating each one separately.
Repayment strategy, borrowing cost, promotional deals and how debt decisions change over time.
A practical guide to repayment momentum, interest drag and what changes a payoff plan in the real world.
Read guideCompare two common debt strategies and understand when the cheapest route is not the easiest one to stick with.
Read guideSee when consolidation improves the numbers and when a lower monthly payment can still cost more overall.
Read guideUnderstand APR, statement timing and why balances can hang around for longer than expected.
Read guideA more realistic look at transfer fees, expiry dates and when a promotional deal solves less than it first appears.
Read guideLearn why minimums protect the account but rarely move the balance fast enough to feel like progress.
Read guideFind out when overpaying a loan reduces cost meaningfully and when holding cash back is the better move.
Read guideA practical guide to cutting borrowing costs by changing repayment order, rates and promotional deal use.
Read guideCompare two common repayment routes and see when each one is cheaper, simpler or easier to stick with.
Read guideEmergency funds, monthly saving targets, account choice, compounding and long-term planning.
See why time matters as much as rate and how regular contributions change long-term outcomes.
Read guideA practical guide to setting a monthly savings figure that fits income, bills and real-life friction.
Read guideWork out what an emergency fund needs to cover and where the target changes depending on job and household risk.
Read guideCompare common UK savings options and think through access, tax treatment and what the money is actually for.
Read guideUnderstand how contributions build, why employer money matters and where pension saving fits the wider plan.
Read guideA decision guide for balancing expensive debt against the need for a usable savings buffer.
Read guideMortgage cost, overpayments, deposits, deal choice and the real cost of housing decisions.
Understand what drives the monthly payment and why rate, term and balance all matter differently.
Read guideSee when overpaying works well and when the flexibility of keeping cash back might matter more.
Read guideCompare the real costs, trade-offs and timing issues behind one of the biggest financial choices most people make.
Read guideA practical breakdown of how stamp duty works and how it can affect the full cost of moving.
Read guideThink through deposit size, product access and what a bigger deposit changes beyond the headline monthly payment.
Read guideCheck when switching deal can save money and when fees or timing reduce the benefit.
Read guideTake-home pay, deductions, payslips, National Insurance and self-employed tax basics.
A simple guide to tax bands, allowances and what actually happens between gross pay and take-home pay.
Read guideUnderstand what your salary means in monthly terms and what tends to reduce the amount that actually lands in your account.
Read guideA straightforward explanation of dividend tax and when it becomes relevant alongside salary or other income.
Read guideUnderstand how NI fits with earnings, employment status and why it shows up separately from income tax.
Read guideCover the basics of estimating tax, setting money aside and staying prepared when income is not PAYE-based.
Read guideQuick answers about how this page fits into the rest of the site.
Yes. This page is the article index, while the topic hubs combine tools and selected guides inside each individual cluster.
Start here when the decision itself is still unclear. If you already know the exact calculation you need, a tool hub may be faster.
Yes. The page is split into debt, savings, mortgages and tax so related articles stay together.
Yes. The aim is to move from explanation to calculation naturally, so the articles connect to the relevant tools where useful.