Bank Account Switching UK 2026 — Current Accounts, CASS and Switching Bonuses

What Happens to Direct Debits When You Switch Banks?

How the Current Account Switch Service moves direct debits, standing orders, and salary. What to check, common problems, and your rights. UK guide.

Part of the Bank Account Switching guide.

Switching bank accounts used to risk missed payments and disruption. The Current Account Switch Service (CASS) eliminates that risk — here is exactly how your direct debits, standing orders, and income are handled when you switch.

How the Current Account Switch Service Handles Your Payments

CASS is a free, guaranteed service run by Pay.UK and backed by every major UK bank and building society. When you use it, the service moves your entire payment setup — not just your balance — within 7 working days. Every participating bank is bound by the same Switch Guarantee: if anything goes wrong as a direct result of the switch, your new bank must correct it and refund any charges or interest you incur.

FeatureDetails
Duration7 working days
Direct debitsAutomatically transferred to new account
Standing ordersAutomatically transferred to new account
Incoming payments (salary, benefits)Redirected to new account for 36 months
Old accountClosed automatically (unless you choose a partial switch)
GuaranteeIf anything goes wrong, your new bank fixes it and covers costs
CostFree

The Switch Timeline

DayWhat happens
Day 1You apply to switch at your new bank
Days 1–6New bank contacts old bank; direct debits, standing orders, and balance are prepared for transfer
Day 7Switch completes — all payments moved, old account closed, redirect set up
Day 7+Your new account is fully active with all your payments
OngoingRedirects from old account details last for 36 months

What Transfers Automatically

Understanding exactly which payment types CASS moves — and which it does not — is the most important thing to grasp before switching. Direct debits and standing orders work differently from each other, but CASS handles both automatically; recurring debit card charges are a different matter entirely (see below).

Payment typeTransferred?Notes
Direct debitsYesAll transferred; recipient notified of new sort code and account number
Standing ordersYesAll transferred to new account
Incoming salaryRedirectedForwarded for 36 months — update employer directly as soon as possible
Benefits (UC, Child Benefit, etc.)RedirectedForwarded for 36 months — update DWP/HMRC directly
Bank balanceYesRemaining balance transferred to new account
OverdraftNoNew bank may offer a new overdraft — not guaranteed to match your existing limit
Linked savings accountsNoStay with old bank — close or move separately
Credit cardsNoNot part of the switch

What You Need to Do Yourself

CASS handles the heavy lifting, but several tasks remain your responsibility. The 36-month redirect catches payments sent to your old account, but it is always better to have your details corrected at source — especially for salary and benefits, where a payroll or DWP systems delay could briefly leave you short.

TaskWhy it matters
Update employer with new detailsPayroll systems can lag — do not rely solely on the redirect
Update HMRC and DWPTax refunds, benefits, and Child Benefit need correct bank details on record
Update any casual payersFriends, family, or clients who pay you by bank transfer need your new sort code
Check new overdraft arrangementYour new bank may offer a lower limit or require a new application
Cancel or move linked savings if neededSavings accounts are separate — decide whether to transfer them
Set up the new bank’s app and online bankingEnable instant notifications so you spot any missed payments immediately

The Critical Exception: Debit Card Subscriptions Are NOT Transferred

This is the single most common mistake people make when switching banks. CASS moves payments linked to your sort code and account number — that is, direct debits and standing orders. Recurring charges linked to your 16-digit debit card number are completely separate and are not touched by CASS.

Payment typeTransferred by CASS?
Direct debits (regular bills, loans, utilities)Yes
Standing ordersYes
Debit card recurring charges (subscriptions)No — linked to your card number
Continuous payment authorities (CPAs)No — update with each company directly

Netflix, Amazon Prime, Spotify, gym memberships, and similar services that store your card details will continue attempting to charge your old card. Once your old account closes, those charges will fail. Before you switch, make a list of every subscription you pay by card and update each one with your new debit card number when it arrives.

Common CASS Problems and How to Fix Them

ProblemCauseSolution
Direct debit not takenDD set up between switch starting and completingContact new bank — covered by the Switch Guarantee
Standing order missedSame timing issueNew bank must fix and refund any charges
Salary paid to old accountEmployer not yet updatedRedirect catches it — payment forwarded automatically
Old account still appears activePartial switch selectedContact old bank to confirm closure status
Overdraft not matched at new bankNew bank applied its own credit assessmentApply for an overdraft with new bank, or keep old account open with a partial switch
Subscription charge failedCPA linked to old card numberUpdate card details directly with the company

If a direct debit is collected incorrectly — whether during a switch or at any other time — you are protected by the Direct Debit Guarantee, which entitles you to an immediate full refund from your bank, no questions asked.

The Switch Guarantee — Your Rights

What it coversHow it works
Missed direct debit or standing orderNew bank corrects it and refunds any associated fees
Interest charges caused by the switchFully refunded by your new bank
Late payment charges from third partiesNew bank contacts the company on your behalf to resolve it
Money lost in transitFully covered — your money must arrive at the new account
How to claimContact your new bank’s switching team — they are obligated to resolve it

Full Switch vs Partial Switch

FeatureFull switchPartial switch
Old accountClosed on switch dateStays open
Direct debits transferredAll of themYou choose which ones
Standing orders transferredAll of themYou choose which ones
36-month redirect in placeYesNo
Balance transferredYesYou choose how much
Time to complete7 working days7 working days
Best forCompletely moving banksKeeping old account alongside a new one

A full switch is the cleanest option for most people. A partial switch is useful if you want to keep your old account open — for example if you have a savings account, mortgage, or credit card with the same bank that you want to maintain.

Switching Checklist

Before switchingAfter switching
List all direct debits and standing orders on the accountConfirm all direct debits appear on new account
Note your overdraft balance and limitCheck standing orders are active
Check whether new bank offers a comparable overdraftUpdate employer payroll records with new details
List all recurring card payments (subscriptions) to update manuallyNotify HMRC, DWP, and local council of new bank details
Compare fees, interest rates, and features at your new bankUpdate card details for subscriptions (Netflix, gym, etc.)
Check for available switching bonusesMonitor both accounts for 2–4 weeks post-switch

How to Switch Step by Step

StepWhat to do
1Choose your new bank and open an account
2Tell the new bank you want to use the Current Account Switch Service
3Choose a switch date (at least 7 working days ahead)
4Choose a full or partial switch
5New bank handles everything — you receive confirmation at each stage
6Start using your new account from the switch date

You can switch online, by phone, or in branch — most banks build the CASS request into the account opening process itself. Many banks also offer switching bonuses of £100–£200 for eligible new customers, so it is worth comparing offers before you decide which bank to move to.


More from the Bank Account Switching guide:

Sources

  1. Current Account Switch Service — CASS Guarantee
  2. Pay.UK — Current Account Switch Service
  3. Gov.uk — Switching bank accounts
  4. FCA — Bank accounts consumer guide