Here is an overview of The Money Charity’s latest statistics for November 2024
Personal debt in the UK
People in the UK owed £1,868.1 billion at the end of September 2024.
The average total debt per household, including mortgages, was £65,777 and per adult was £34,594, around 95.3% of average earnings.
Net mortgage lending increased by £2.739 billion in the month, while net consumer credit lending increased by £270 million.
Citizens Advice Bureaux across England and Wales answered 255,090 enquiries in October 2024, 0.96% down from October 2023.
Mortgages, Rent and Housing
Outstanding mortgage lending stood at £1,635 billion at the end of September 2024.
The average mortgage interest rate was 3.75% at the end of September 2024. Based on this, households with mortgages would pay an average of £5,705 in mortgage interest over the year.
HM Land Registry reports that the average house price for first-time buyers in Great Britain was £245,508 in September 2024, an annual increase of 3.2% and a monthly decrease of 0.4%.
According to the Office for National Statistics, private rental prices in the UK rose by 8.7% in the 12 months to October 2024.
Spending and Loans
On average, 42.82 cash machine transactions (including balance enquiries and rejected transactions) were made every second in September 2024, a decrease of 10.5% on September 2023.
The number of ATMs (in-branch and remote) fell from 50,300 at the end of 2022 to 47,711 at the end of 2023 (a fall of 5.2%).
In Q2 2024, households in the UK spent £147.58 million a day on water, electricity and gas, or £5.20 per household per day.
UK Finance figures show that 49.1% of credit card balances were bearing interest in August 2024.
Financial Inclusion
According to the FCA, in the UK in 2022 there were 1.1 million adults who did not have a bank account. This was 2.1% of the UK adult population.
According to ONS, in 2022 there were 8,060 bank and building society branches in the UK. This was a reduction of 750 branches (-8.5%) from the year before.
According to UK Finance, in 2023, 1.5 million adults mainly used cash, the first yearly rise in cash usage since 2019.
Fair By Design has estimated that the cost of the poverty premium to a typical parliamentary constituency is £4.5 million a year. This equates to over £430per year for a low-income household.
One in three are unhappy with their finances and 35% fear they won’t be able to afford the retirement they want according to research by Oxford Risk. The data showed that over-55s are struggling in the run-up to retirement with just two out of five (38%) clear on how much money they will need when…