yosh
5 Sep 2017
Law / Bank commissions in Poland - are there some standard fees, and where can I find them [10]
It differs a lot depending on loan type, amount of money, your connection to a bank (do you have an account there ? is your salary going to that bank ?), risk factors (collateral ? mortgage ? loan for a car ? all different), the way you earn in Poland (salary ? self-employed?)
Just to give you a hint - go to any bank website and look for "Kredyty". Just by example go to BZWBK (disclaimer: I'm not in any way connected with that bank, I just have the account there) and click "Kredyty" - you'll see 3 different things typically in bank's offer:
- kredyt gotowkowy - just cash for anything
- limit kredytowy w koncie - a loan "inside" of your bank account. In UK similar thing is called "Overdraft" - and this has nothing to do with credit card,
- kredyt mieszkaniowy - typical mortgage
Now, if it's not enough, click a small button below saying "wszystkie produkty" (all products) - you'll see how many different loans they have in offer.
This is typical for any bank in Poland I believe.
So, you said "personal loan" - with 4% it may be a not bad, what's the rate after that (what you mean "good rate" :) ) ?
Also, before actually taking the loan, look for two things they HAVE to provide (by law):
- RRSO - it's a very important number, a summary rate for all fees and rates of a loan. This is your biggest important factor to compare loans. RRSO is "Roczna Rzeczywista Stopa Oprocentowania" which roughly means "Real Annual Rate". When they'll charge you any fees, rates etc. and it will become more than the RRSO declared - you will be covered
- the re-payment schedule - the list of your payments month-by-month. Get that on print - and compare with some online loan calculator calculla.com/loan or something similar
It differs a lot depending on loan type, amount of money, your connection to a bank (do you have an account there ? is your salary going to that bank ?), risk factors (collateral ? mortgage ? loan for a car ? all different), the way you earn in Poland (salary ? self-employed?)
Just to give you a hint - go to any bank website and look for "Kredyty". Just by example go to BZWBK (disclaimer: I'm not in any way connected with that bank, I just have the account there) and click "Kredyty" - you'll see 3 different things typically in bank's offer:
- kredyt gotowkowy - just cash for anything
- limit kredytowy w koncie - a loan "inside" of your bank account. In UK similar thing is called "Overdraft" - and this has nothing to do with credit card,
- kredyt mieszkaniowy - typical mortgage
Now, if it's not enough, click a small button below saying "wszystkie produkty" (all products) - you'll see how many different loans they have in offer.
This is typical for any bank in Poland I believe.
So, you said "personal loan" - with 4% it may be a not bad, what's the rate after that (what you mean "good rate" :) ) ?
Also, before actually taking the loan, look for two things they HAVE to provide (by law):
- RRSO - it's a very important number, a summary rate for all fees and rates of a loan. This is your biggest important factor to compare loans. RRSO is "Roczna Rzeczywista Stopa Oprocentowania" which roughly means "Real Annual Rate". When they'll charge you any fees, rates etc. and it will become more than the RRSO declared - you will be covered
- the re-payment schedule - the list of your payments month-by-month. Get that on print - and compare with some online loan calculator calculla.com/loan or something similar