You can buy the new £1coin before its release for up to £1,995
The new-look 12-sided coin will come into circulation across the UK on 28 March r
The new-look 12-sided coin will come into circulation across the UK on 28 March r
Tax changes are coming in from April 2017 - Car tax, income tax and child tax credits are all undergoing big changes. Here's what you need to know.
Londoners the only people to report negative reaction to EU referendum vote, with a third saying they had changed their property plans
The survey, based on responses from 2,000 people in full time salaried or hourly employment, showed that regionally Londoners are putting in the most overtime—an average of 9.6 hours a week
Need a credit card? Here are this month's cheapest deals, whatever your circumstances.
The IEA says the £1 cost of a cheeseburger could also buy a kilo of sweet potatoes, two kilos of carrots, or 10 apples
Prominent economic thinkers are backing the shared economy as fundamental to all our futures
Urban house prices outpace earnings growth to make Oxford the UK’s least affordable city to live in
Tech giants such as Facebook or Google are far from the only ones that are getting creative in order to sweeten their employees’ moods
With precious little interest from potential buyers, where does the Co-op Bank's sale now leave ethical banking customers?
Will futuristic banking security measures really make our money safer?
One option proposed in a new Government Green Paper would see firms linking annual rises to the consumer price index measure of inflation, rather than the higher retail price index
Will a building society take better care of you while a bank offers better rates? Or are they all the same?
The proportion of young men doing low-paid work increased by around 45 per cent between 1993 and last year
A landmark legal case looks set to overturn the way millions of unmarried couples’ finances are treated.
The era of satisfying morals but questionable returns is over as businesses and investors wake up to the power of ethics
Can't save, won't save. As the UK faces a long period of economic uncertainty, the latest figures on our personal finances make for worrying reading
70 per cent of the UK's growing ranks of freelance workers have been asked to work for free. But experts suggest we all are.
The government has increased the amount that millions of families would receive if a breadwinner dies. So why do we remain woefully unprepared?
It costs extra to be poor. And now, that additional cost is hitting those on the breadline even harder