Savings .com.au
William Jolly

William Jolly

Financial Journalist

William Jolly joined Savings.com.au as a Financial Journalist in 2018, after spending two years at financial research firm Canstar. In William's articles, you're likely to find complex financial topics and products broken down into everyday language. He is deeply passionate about improving the financial literacy of Australians and providing them with resources on how to save money in their everyday lives.

Recent articles for this author

New buy-now, pay-later product Bundll like ‘a debit card on steroids’

Westpac cuts max interest rate on Westpac Life savings account to 1.95%

Nearly half of Australians want financial advice: ASIC

Aussies paying $30 a month for video streaming services

Citi is gutting home loan rates by as much as 160 basis points

RAMS to cut savings account rate by a further 20 basis points

Westpac Group drop fixed home loan rates below 3%

Commbank CEO defends cuts to deposit and home loan rates

ANZ, CBA, NAB & Westpac have all cut term deposit rates this month

TransferWise launches new “11x cheaper” travel card

Loans.com.au, Tic:Toc, Suncorp, ME, Heritage Bank, cut fixed home loan rates

Home lending ticks upwards in June

Reserve Bank keeps cash rate steady

Consumer Data Right passes: What does this mean for customers?

Term deposit, savings account rates slump to a new all-time low

No, your wedding reception is not tax-deductible

No pay rise for Aussies in eight years

These banks haven’t passed on a rate cut to savings accounts in July

RACQ reveals the cheapest and most expensive cars to own in 2019

Westpac, NAB & others cut savings account and term deposit rates

86 400 becomes Australia’s newest bank

The average Aussie is a millionaire (sort of)

Who’s cut rates on savings accounts and term deposits this month?

ASIC sets sights on ‘predatory’ short-term credit providers

We’re wasting thousands on cars we don’t even drive

Will savers continue to struggle after another RBA rate cut?

Australians wasting nearly $4 billion on unused subscription services