Bank Security UK 2026 — FSCS Protection, Scam Prevention, Complaints and Your Rights

What Happens If Your Bank Goes Bust? FSCS Protection Explained

Find out what happens to your money if your bank fails in the UK. FSCS protection limits, shared banking licences, how to claim compensation, and how to protect savings over £85,000.

Part of our Bank Security UK 2026 — FSCS Protection, Scam Prevention, Complaints and Your Rights hub.

UK bank failures are rare — the regulatory overhaul following 2008 made them rarer still. But understanding what happens if your bank does fail, and how to ensure your savings are fully protected, is basic financial housekeeping every UK adult should do. The key mechanism is the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS).

FSCS Protection: The Basics

What’s ProtectedLimit Per Person
Current accounts£85,000
Savings accounts£85,000
Cash ISAs£85,000
Joint accounts£170,000 total (£85,000 per holder)

Critical point: The £85,000 limit applies per banking licence, not per account. If you have multiple accounts with brands that share a licence, the limit covers all of them combined.

The Banking Licence Trap

This is the most important thing most savers don’t know. Some well-known high-street brands share a single banking licence, which means your £85,000 protection applies across all of them together.

Brands Sharing a Licence

GroupBrands Under the Same Licence
Lloyds Banking GroupLloyds Bank, Halifax, Bank of Scotland
NatWest GroupNatWest, Royal Bank of Scotland, Ulster Bank (NI)
BarclaysBarclays, Barclaycard
Santander UKSantander, Cahoot
Virgin MoneyVirgin Money, Clydesdale Bank, Yorkshire Bank

Example: If you have £60,000 with Lloyds and £40,000 with Halifax, you hold £100,000 under a single banking licence. Only £85,000 is protected — £15,000 is at risk.

Banks with Separate Licences

These banks hold their own independent licences:

  • Nationwide Building Society
  • Starling Bank
  • Monzo
  • Chase UK
  • Marcus by Goldman Sachs
  • Metro Bank
  • Revolut (UK banking licence granted 2024)

Always verify on the FSCS website before assuming, as licence arrangements can change.

How FSCS Compensation Works

If your bank fails, FSCS takes over automatically. You don’t usually need to do anything:

StepTimeframe
Bank failsDay 0
FSCS informedImmediately
Depositors contactedWithin days
Compensation paidTarget: 7 working days
Complex casesUp to 3 months

FSCS receives customer data from the failed bank and contacts you directly. Payment is made to a nominated account or by cheque. If you don’t hear from them, you can claim directly via fscs.org.uk or call 0800 678 1100.

What Happens to Different Products

Current and Savings Accounts

ScenarioOutcome
Balance under £85,000Full FSCS compensation
Balance over £85,000£85,000 protected, the remainder at risk
Temporary high balance (qualifying event)Up to £1 million protected for 6 months

Cash ISAs

Cash ISAs are protected up to £85,000 per banking licence, including:

Stocks and Shares ISAs

Investments are usually held separately in nominee accounts — they belong to you, not the provider, so they aren’t part of the provider’s insolvency estate. In practice:

SituationProtection
Provider goes bust, investments intactInvestments transferred to new provider
Provider goes bust, investments lost due to fraud/mismanagementFSCS covers up to £85,000

Mortgages and Loans

Your debt doesn’t disappear if your lender fails:

ProductWhat Happens
MortgageTransferred to another lender; existing terms must be honoured
Personal loanYou still owe it; debt transferred
Credit cardBalance transferred; you keep paying
OverdraftDepends on administration arrangements

Temporary High Balance Protection

FSCS protects up to £1 million for 6 months after certain life events deposit large sums:

Qualifying EventExample
Property saleProceeds from selling your home
InheritanceReceiving money from an estate
Insurance payoutLife insurance or personal injury settlement
RedundancyStatutory or enhanced redundancy payment
Divorce settlementCourt-ordered financial settlement

You must be able to evidence the qualifying source of the funds. Once the 6-month window closes, the standard £85,000 limit applies — so move any excess into protected accounts before then.

How to Protect Savings Over £85,000

Strategy 1: Spread Across Separate Licences

BankLicence StatusDepositProtected
NationwideIndependent£85,000
StarlingIndependent£85,000
Marcus by Goldman SachsIndependent£85,000
Total£255,000Fully protected

Strategy 2: NS&I — Unlimited Government Backing

National Savings & Investments are 100% backed by HM Treasury — there is no FSCS limit because the government itself guarantees the money.

NS&I ProductProtection
Premium Bonds100% (no limit)
Direct Saver100%
Income Bonds100%
Junior ISA100%

The trade-off is that NS&I rates are often slightly below market leaders. But for amounts well above £85,000, the unlimited protection may outweigh a small rate difference.

Strategy 3: Use Joint Accounts

Account TypeProtection Per Bank
Individual£85,000
Joint£170,000

A couple can protect £340,000 at a single bank: £85,000 each individually plus £170,000 in a joint account. Across multiple banks with separate licences, this scales significantly.

Full Example: Couple with £500,000 to Protect

AccountBankHolder(s)Protected
Joint savingsNationwideBoth£170,000
Individual savingsMarcusPartner A£85,000
Individual savingsStarlingPartner B£85,000
Premium BondsNS&IBoth£100,000
Individual savingsMetro BankPartner A£60,000
Total£500,000 — fully protected

During a Bank Failure: What to Expect

Your ConcernReality
Can I access my money?Possibly frozen briefly during administration
Will I lose my savings?No — up to FSCS limits
Will my Direct Debits fail?Possibly — notify important payees proactively
Can I use my debit card?Likely frozen during administration
When do I get compensated?Target: 7 working days

Practical steps if your bank fails:

  1. Don’t panic — FSCS protection is automatic
  2. Check fscs.org.uk and your email for official communications
  3. Notify your employer, utility providers, and mortgage lender of any payment issues
  4. Keep records of all account statements and balances
  5. Wait for FSCS contact — don’t call prematurely; they will reach out

If you suspect fraud rather than a genuine bank failure, report it immediately. For guidance on spotting and reporting fraud, see our bank scams protection guide. If you have an unresolved dispute with your bank separate from a failure, our how to complain to your bank guide explains the process.

UK Bank Failures: Historical Context

YearInstitutionOutcome
2008Northern RockNationalised by government
2008Bradford & BingleyNationalised; savings transferred to Santander
2008Icesave (UK deposits)FSCS compensated UK savers; Icelandic parent failed
2017Maple Bank GmbH (UK branch)FSCS paid compensation

Since the post-2008 regulatory reforms — including stress testing, higher capital requirements, and resolution planning — no UK retail bank has failed in a way that left ordinary depositors unprotected. The FSCS backstop has never been tested at scale for a major high-street bank.

International and Offshore Accounts

Offshore accounts are not covered by FSCS. Different rules apply:

LocationScheme
Isle of ManDepositors’ Compensation Scheme (up to £50,000)
JerseyJersey Bank Depositors Compensation Scheme (up to £50,000)
GuernseyGuernsey Banking Deposit Compensation Scheme
GibraltarGibraltar DCS
EU branches of foreign banksHome country scheme (typically €100,000)

Always check the specific scheme for any non-UK account.

Protection Checklist

  • Confirm each bank you use is FSCS-registered
  • Check whether any of your banks share a banking licence
  • Ensure no single licence holds more than £85,000 of your money
  • Use joint accounts to double protection at any one bank
  • Consider NS&I for savings above what can be spread across licences
  • Keep records of account numbers, balances, and statements
  • Know the FSCS claims number: 0800 678 1100

Sources

  1. FSCS — Banks and building societies
  2. FSCS — Temporary high balance protection
  3. FSCS — How to make a claim
  4. FCA — Financial Services Register
  5. Bank of England — Resolution and recovery