Will I be able to rent a car at 19 years old (had driving license for 2 years)

Planning on travelling to Kefalonia end of August / September. Have read that I’ll most likely need to hire a car if I want to actually see the nice beaches and explore. Is it possible to rent a car at 19 years old and if so how much would I be looking cost wise per day (£).

Thanks

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u/Existing-Pea-4696 — 8 days ago
▲ 5 r/travel

Where to go in Greece

Hi guys I’m planning on going for a 4-5 night holiday to Greece with my girlfriend on the 13th of July. I’m really torn on where to go. We are not really into party life and don’t drink etc. we prefer nice evenings dinners and walks.

Below are the things we enjoy most :
Snorkelling in clear water
Nice beaches / coves to visit
Nice morning walks to nice cafes
Boat trips
Nice relaxed city vibes

Can anyone help?

Thanks

reddit.com
u/Existing-Pea-4696 — 13 days ago

Where to go with girlfriend in Greece?

Hi guys I’m planning on going for a 4-5 night holiday to Greece with my girlfriend on the 13th of July. I’m really torn on where to go. We are not really into party life and don’t drink etc. we prefer nice evenings dinners and walks.

Below are the things we enjoy most :
Snorkelling in clear water
Nice beaches / coves to visit
Nice morning walks to nice cafes
Boat trips
Nice relaxed city vibes

Can anyone help?

Thanks

reddit.com
u/Existing-Pea-4696 — 13 days ago

Building services engineering degree apprenticeship focused on electrical in the role .

Hi everyone,
I’m considering studying Building Services Engineering with a focus on electrical systems in the actual role (building services electrical) and I’m trying to understand the long-term career opportunities.
From what I’ve seen, the degree seems to cover electrical design for buildings, power distribution, lighting, renewable technologies, energy efficiency, and related areas. I’m interested in whether people working in the industry think this is a degree with strong upside over the next 10–20 years.
I’m particularly curious about:
How future-proof is Building Services Engineering (Electrical)?
Are there good opportunities for progression and high earnings?
Is demand for electrical building services engineers expected to remain strong?
How transferable are the skills to other sectors?
One area I’m especially interested in is energy infrastructure (grid projects, substations, transmission and distribution, renewable energy projects, etc.). Would a Building Services Engineering degree focused on electrical engineering allow someone to move into energy infrastructure later in their career, or would that be difficult without a more traditional Electrical Engineering degree?
I’d love to hear from anyone working in building services, power systems, energy renewables, or related industries.

reddit.com
u/Existing-Pea-4696 — 1 month ago

Is Building Services Engineering (Electrical) a degree with good future prospects? Can it lead into energy infrastructure?

Hi everyone,
I’m considering studying Building Services Engineering with a focus on electrical systems in the actual role (building services electrical) and I’m trying to understand the long-term career opportunities.
From what I’ve seen, the degree seems to cover electrical design for buildings, power distribution, lighting, renewable technologies, energy efficiency, and related areas. I’m interested in whether people working in the industry think this is a degree with strong upside over the next 10–20 years.
I’m particularly curious about:
How future-proof is Building Services Engineering (Electrical)?
Are there good opportunities for progression and high earnings?
Is demand for electrical building services engineers expected to remain strong?
How transferable are the skills to other sectors?
One area I’m especially interested in is energy infrastructure (grid projects, substations, transmission and distribution, renewable energy projects, etc.). Would a Building Services Engineering degree focused on electrical engineering allow someone to move into energy infrastructure later in their career, or would that be difficult without a more traditional Electrical Engineering degree?
I’d love to hear from anyone working in building services, power systems, energy, renewables, or related industries.

reddit.com
u/Existing-Pea-4696 — 1 month ago

Building services engineering degree??

Hi all,

I have been offered a degree apprenticeship for a building services electrical engineer but the qualification is a ‘building services engineer’ degree.

Is this degree any good or am I pigeonholing myself? Will I be able to take this degree into energy infrastructure etc? What type of money can I expect after qualified?

Thanks

reddit.com
u/Existing-Pea-4696 — 1 month ago
▲ 0 r/UKPersonalFinance+1 crossposts

Hi, so I’ve been working employed at the docks on a zero hour contract getting around 20-30hours a week. I’m also going to start traffic management during the week as the dock shifts are mostly on weekends. I am employed on PAYE at the docks and the employer does all my tax. But when I start traffic management I will have to be self employed and do my own tax. Was just wondering if anyone had any advice on how I deal with the tax etc and if I need to do anything as never been employed and self employed at the same time.

Thanks

reddit.com
u/Existing-Pea-4696 — 2 months ago