Years ago in a house-share I had to deal with Greyhound and their service (if you can call it that) was absolutely abysmal. The truck never showing up on the day and asking you to leave the full bin on the footpath for days or weeks because they could not tell you which day they would come and empty it. And their customer support was even worse.
Hello,
I left Greyhound for CityBin a few years ago and it was the best move I ever made.
Greyhound were a disaster to deal with, CityBin on the other hand, are very professional.
I've no experience with Thorntons, but I would recommend CityBin in a heartbeat.
Interesting to see that so many people have the same experience. We were also with greyhound (who were awful) and moved to city bin (who are great). I’m amazed greyhound are still in business.
Me too, I’ve convinced many of my neighbours to move to city bins.Exact same experience as above, as have many i know
Is there a low weight restriction on that? I'm with Greyhound for years and I see my monthly bill is going up to 22.50 a month from July for 40kg black bin.Got 16.50 euro deal from greyhound and 1 free month. The others are 15 euro for similar service. So think it works out the same.
Hello,
I left Greyhound for CityBin a few years ago and it was the best move I ever made.
Greyhound were a disaster to deal with, CityBin on the other hand, are very professional.
I've no experience with Thorntons, but I would recommend CityBin in a heartbeat.
Ah, so the whole venture starts with a 'balance transfer', but there was no original balance to repay in the first place? Some of the companies transfer the money directly to your other credit card(s).
Assuming a constant 3% for the life of the mortgage, and overpayment of 5k per annum, reducing term rather than repayment amount, you'd save 1,585 in interest by repaying the 5k in a lump sum at the start of the year (every year) Vs overpaying 417 per month.
But you'd need to do the balance transfer at least 19 times (assuming 12 months interest free is available). But most are shorter. And we're still assuming it can be transferred to your current account, with no cash advance fees.
If you don't have the funds available to repay it, there's risk. I've posted previously about a friend who used credit cards to pay the deposit on a property purchase. This was pre 2008. It all worked beautifully doing 0% balance transfers, until suddenly there were no more. He was paying 20% interest on a 30k balance, while his property lost 50% in value.
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