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Provident Personal Loans News
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Provident Personal Credit Review
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Provident Personal Credit is the UK & Republic of Ireland's leading home collected credit company,
offering small, unsecured personal loans and other related products. For well over 100 years Provident Personal Credit
have been helping generations of people buy the things they need, using their friendly door-to-door service. Their
customers' needs are serviced by their nationwide branch network and over 10,000 Agents.
Provident offer
unsecured loans to customers from all walks of life, often to people with poor credit ratings; even county court judgements
– people other loan providers may not be able to serve.
For first-time customers Provident
offer unsecured loans of between £50 and £500, dependent upon your personal circumstances. Existing customers
can apply for up to £2,500. The service Provident Finance offer is different because an agent calls at your
home every week to collect the repayments. The amount they quote and the amount that your credit agreement states is
what you repay – there are no nasty surprises. Provident
Finance Credit could lend where others won’t, because their personal service means they treat everyone
as an individual so they will decide on your loan on your circumstances, not just your credit history. It’s
all part of the Provident commitment to help customers by being open, honest and up-front so Provident always make
sure that any loan from them will be for an amount that you can afford to repay. Applications are possible from
consumers with CCJs or poor credit history as this needn’t be a problem and Provident will even consider
you even if you’ve been turned down before and also tenants and the unemployed welcome to apply for a Provident
loan and remember they offer fixed weekly manageable repayments so if you are looking for a loan and have a bad or poor credit
history try Provident.
Click Here to Apply for a Provident Loan.
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According to Datamonitor estimations, approx 9.1 million people of working age in the UK would have been
refused credit by mainstream lenders in 2005.
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