Martin Lewis has issued important advice to people who have mobile phones, urging them to do five things before the April price hike.
Speaking on the Martin Lewis Money Show, the consumer expert told viewers: "On around the beginning of April, many mobile bills are to rise up to a typical 17%. Even if you are mid contract, which is something that should be stopped, even including some of the big ones. It's not always this.
"So what do you do about it? Five steps." He said: "First text INFO on 85075 on your current phone, it's free to do, to find out if you're out of contract and free to leave."
Read More: Martin Lewis explains 'secret code' that can save you money on medicines
Martin urged people to pick up cheap SIM-only deals via price comparison websites. His third tip was to find a low-price network that uses the same signal.
There are only four main signal providers - O2, EE, Vodafone and Three - and cheaper rivals like Tesco and Giffgaff just piggyback on these, Mr Lewis said. Step four is to get your PAC code by texting 'PAC' to 65075.
This allows you to give the resulting code to a different network to request that your mobile number be moved across to the company you want to switch to to save cash. In his final tip, Martin said mobile customers can use a cheap deal as a benchmark to haggle, reports Birmingham Live.
Martin added: "When you go to them and that's where you get the better deal, if they say to you 'I'm sorry we will disconnect you, you say 'I just need to check that with my husband, wife or parrot." One Martin Lewis fan watching the show contacted the financial guru and explained he had swapped to a SIM only deal, saving £545 per year against their previous contract in the process.
To get the latest money news direct to your inbox, click here
Read Next:
List of DWP benefits you can no longer claim after reaching State Pension age
Every DWP cost of living payment from April - who is eligible and when money will be paid
How to claim DWP Universal Credit as free support scheme extended to help people apply
DWP Universal Credit sanctions - what you can do if you have your payments cut
Major Tesco Clubcard change sees shoppers fume as value of vouchers slashed