u/BenPainter

Plum: £90 referral bonus for new users, £10 deposit required, ends 21/07/2026

Plum: £90 referral bonus for new users, £10 deposit required, ends 21/07/2026

Easy £90 Plum referral bonus, if anyone is interested.

Plum has temporarily increased its referral bonus to £90 during the football tournament. You need to sign up through a referral link before 21/07/2026 and either deposit at least £10 into an eligible Plum account or use one of their savings rules.

Once the requirements are met, both the person joining and the referrer get £90 paid into their Plum pockets.

The eligible accounts include Cash ISA, Lifetime ISA, Stocks & Shares ISA, General Investment Account, Easy Access Savings, Notice Pocket, Plum Interest and Pension.

I’m sharing because the £10 deposit requirement makes this one of the more accessible referral offers I’ve seen recently. Obviously check the T&Cs first and only open something that makes sense for you.

MY LINK HAS NOW BEEN USED BY ALL POSSIBLE REFEREES; PLEASE USE ANOTHER ONE BELOW

Non-referral link: https://withplum.com/

Important qualification points:

You need to be completely new to Plum. If you already downloaded the app, accepted Plum’s T&Cs, or started creating an account before, you may not count as a new referral.

You also need to use the referral link before registering. If you sign up first and try to add the link later, the referral will not be tracked.

To qualify, sign up through the referral link before 21/07/2026 and complete the required action. My campaign says this can be done by depositing at least £10 into an eligible Plum account or using a savings rule.

Plum says rewards are paid after their checks, so it is not instant or guaranteed if the steps are not completed correctly.

Only use this if you actually want to try Plum for saving or investing, and check the terms before signing up.

u/BenPainter — 3 days ago

Does anyone know the legal loophole that Lingoda use for paying teachers below minimum wage?

I've been teaching with Lingoda for several years and although they have always promised a payrise on the horizon, they have never actually come through and increased salary from a measly 11euros an hour. This is WELL BELOW the legal minimum wage in almost every developed country and if it wasn't for physical disability I would go out and get a job that pays above it.

I understand that the state of online English teaching is terrible but surely there should be some regulation to ensure they are at least paying the minimum wage to their teachers, right?

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u/BenPainter — 19 days ago