meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Money Box

How to get £150 for your fuel bill

Money Box

BBC

Business

4.2825 Ratings

🗓️ 30 April 2022

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Welcome to April, the season of rising prices and higher taxes - including the largest increase in energy bills. The first of two payments to help with those bills should arrive this month - a £150 rebate paid by local councils to all householders in Great Britain in council tax Bands A to D. (In Wales and Scotland the money will also go to Band E-H householders who benefit from council tax reduction schemes.) For those who pay council tax by direct debit, getting the money should be straightforward. But as Money Box's Dan Whitworth reports, others - including students - may find it more difficult. We hear from Abby Jitendra, principal policy manager for energy at Citizens Advice.

What's going on at the pensions and insurance company Scottish Widows? Listeners ask Money Box for help with very long delays in accessing money and problems with funeral plans. We hear from Kirsty Stone, independent financial adviser at The Private Office.

From Wednesday 6th April, divorce will be easier in England and Wales. No more will one partner have to prove fault by the other. No more will a 2 or even 5 year separation be needed. It can all be done in 6 months, online and without the courts. And the same for ending a civil partnership. But is this too hasty to sort out financial arrangements? We hear from Jo Edwards, Head of Family at Forsters Solicitors.

More than £1.5 billion in pension credit went unclaimed in 2020 leaving up to 850,000 pensioner households short. We hear from Henry Tapper, of the Pension Playpen, about a new initiative from inside the pension industry to tackle the problem that a third of the pensioners who need this extra money don’t get it.

Presenter: Paul Lewis Producer: Paul Waters Reporter: Dan Whitworth Researcher: Marianna Brain

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On a winter's night in 1974, a crime took place that would obsess the nation.

0:07.0

It was an extraordinary news story.

0:09.0

The story of an aristocrat, Lord Lucan, who's said to have killed the family Nanny,

0:14.0

mistaking her for his wife, then somehow just disappeared.

0:18.0

One of the great mysteries in English criminal history. We're still looking for Lucan.

0:21.6

It's honestly one of the most powerful stories of my lifetime.

0:25.6

I'm Alex Fondunzelman.

0:26.6

This is The Lucan Obsession.

0:28.6

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:30.6

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:35.6

Hello, welcome to this Moneybox podcast.

0:39.3

Scottish widows might, or might not, pay your money on time.

0:43.3

Decides today, divorce in October are the new rules

0:47.3

for ending marriages in England and Wales too hasty to sort the finances out

0:52.3

and the private sector plans to get the public to claim

0:56.0

their state benefit entitlements. But first, welcome to April, the season of rising prices

1:03.1

and higher taxes. Topping the list is the largest increase in energy bills ever known. The first

1:10.1

of two payments to help with those bills should be

1:12.5

arriving this month, a £150 £5 rebate paid by local councils to all householders in council tax

1:19.0

bans A to D. Sound simple. Moneyboxes, Dan, Wittworth is here. Dan, simple as it sounds.

1:25.8

There's a bit more to it than that, Paul.

1:28.2

So across Great Britain, as you say, people living in homes classed as bans A to D in council

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from BBC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of BBC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.