Joint Bank Accounts UK 2026 — Complete Guide for Couples and Families

How to Close a Joint Account After a Breakup UK — Step-by-Step Guide

Step-by-step guide to closing a joint bank account after a separation or divorce in the UK. How to protect your money, split the balance, move direct debits, and remove your financial association.

This guide is part of the Joint Accounts hub, covering everything from setting up a joint account to managing shared finances through separation.

Breaking up is hard enough without the financial complications. This guide walks through exactly how to close a joint bank account after a separation — how to protect your money, split the balance, move your bills, and remove the financial link from your credit file.

Before Closing — Protect Yourself First

The most important step is to act quickly. Until a joint account is frozen, either account holder can withdraw the entire balance without the other’s permission.

PriorityAction
1Contact the bank and freeze the account — either party can request this
2Download or print statements for at least the last 6 months
3List every direct debit and standing order running from the account
4Open a personal account in your sole name if you do not already have one
5Move essential direct debits to your new personal account
6Redirect your salary or income to your personal account
7Update any shared online banking passwords

Freezing the account is the single most important first step. It prevents either party from emptying the account while you work out the practical details.

Step-by-Step: Closing a Joint Account

Step 1 — Freeze the Account

DetailInformation
Can one person freeze it?Yes — contact the bank by phone or in branch
What does freezing do?No money can be withdrawn, no payments leave
Can money still come in?Usually yes — incoming transfers may still arrive
Does the other person need to agree?No — either account holder can request a freeze

Call your bank’s main customer service number, explain that you are separating and wish to place a freeze on the joint account. Most banks have a dedicated process for this. You do not need the other person’s permission.

Step 2 — Agree How to Split the Balance

SituationWhat to Do
You agree on the splitInstruct the bank in writing — they will distribute as instructed
You cannot agreeThe bank will not decide — seek mediation or legal advice
One person paid in moreBoth legally own the full balance equally, for banking purposes
Divorce or civil partnership dissolutionA court can direct the split as part of a financial order

The bank treats both account holders as equal owners of the entire balance — it does not apportion based on who deposited what. Evidence of contributions matters in legal proceedings but not for how the bank handles the account day to day.

Step 3 — Move Direct Debits and Standing Orders

Do this before closing the account. Missing a mortgage payment, council tax bill, or energy direct debit can damage your credit file and trigger penalty charges. For a full explanation of how direct debits work, see our direct debit vs standing order guide.

Bill TypeAction
Rent or mortgageContact landlord or lender — agree who takes over payments and from which account
Council taxContact your council — update payment account and notify of any change in household
Energy billsContact supplier — transfer to one person’s name and new account
Broadband and TVContact provider — transfer or cancel the contract
Home and car insuranceUpdate policies — joint policies may need to be split into two
SubscriptionsCancel or transfer to individual accounts
Joint loan repaymentsContact lender — both remain liable for the full balance until it is paid off

Step 4 — Close the Account

RequirementDetail
Both parties usually requiredMost banks need both signatures or authorisation to close
How to closeIn branch (both present), by post (both sign), or by phone
If one person will not cooperateAsk the bank to remove you from the account — some will allow this
Remaining balanceDistributed as agreed, or split equally if no other instruction
Time to processTypically 1–5 working days

If your ex-partner refuses to engage, keep the account frozen and take legal advice. You can also contact your bank’s financial abuse or vulnerability team — they have specific procedures for situations involving uncooperative ex-partners.

Step 5 — Remove the Financial Association from Your Credit File

Even after closing the account, you remain financially linked on your credit file until you take action. Your ex-partner’s future defaults, missed payments, or County Court Judgements can affect your ability to get credit while that link exists.

ActionHow
Equifaxequifax.co.uk or via ClearScore
Experianexperian.co.uk or via MSE Credit Club
TransUniontransunion.co.uk or via Credit Karma
What to requestA “notice of disassociation” from your ex-partner
How long it takesTypically 1–4 weeks

Contact all three agencies — each maintains its own database. The financial association is removed once you apply; you do not need the other person’s agreement.

Legal FactDetail
Both own all the moneyThe bank treats you as equal owners of the entire balance
Joint and several liabilityBoth are liable for any overdraft or debt — even if the other person caused it
Either can withdraw all funds (unless frozen)This is why freezing immediately matters
The bank will not adjudicate disputesThey do not decide who “deserves” what
Court can order a splitIn divorce, courts have powers to divide joint assets
If one person empties the accountRecourse is a civil claim or through divorce financial remedy proceedings

If Your Ex-Partner Will Not Cooperate

ProblemSolution
They will not agree to closeKeep it frozen and get legal advice
They emptied the account before you could freeze itCivil claim for unjust enrichment, or address through divorce proceedings
They will not share account informationYou are entitled to your own account statements — request directly from the bank
They will not pay their share of joint debtsYou are both fully liable — pay to protect your credit score, then pursue them for their share
You are experiencing financial abuseContact your bank’s vulnerability team and the National Domestic Abuse helpline: 0808 2000 247

Joint Debts — Your Liability

This is one of the most important practical points: on joint debt, both parties are liable for the full balance — not just “their half”.

Joint DebtYour Liability
Joint credit cardFull balance — not half
Joint loanFull balance
Joint mortgageFull mortgage payments
Overdraft on joint accountFull overdraft amount
Rent arrears (joint tenancy)Full arrears
Council tax (jointly liable by default)Full amount

Prioritise clearing joint debts. Missed payments damage both credit files equally, regardless of who spent the money.

Special Situations

Married Couples and Civil Partners

DetailInformation
Divorce financial settlementCourt can order redistribution of all assets, including joint accounts
Consent orderFormalises the agreed financial split — apply to court jointly
Pension sharingCan also be ordered in divorce proceedings — separate from bank accounts

Unmarried Couples

DetailInformation
No automatic right to partner’s assetsUnlike marriage, financial orders are not available
Joint account balanceBank treats you as 50/50 owners unless both agree otherwise
PropertyDepends on ownership structure — joint tenants vs tenants in common
Cohabitation agreementIf you had one, it may specify how assets are divided

For more on how joint accounts work in general — including how they affect your credit file and what rights each holder has — see the joint accounts guide.

Situations Involving Financial Abuse

If you are experiencing financial abuse — where a partner controls, restricts, or exploits your access to money — banks have specialist support.

SupportDetails
Your bank’s vulnerability teamCall your bank — they have dedicated procedures for domestic abuse situations
National Domestic Abuse Helpline0808 2000 247 (24 hours, free)
Surviving Economic Abusesurvivingeconomicabuse.org — specialist charity for economic abuse
Legal aidMay be available in domestic abuse situations — check gov.uk/legal-aid
Citizens AdviceFree advice on separating finances, benefits entitlement, and legal options

Closing Checklist

DoneAction
Freeze the joint account
Open a personal current account in your sole name
Redirect salary and income to your personal account
List all direct debits and standing orders
Move essential bills to new personal account
Agree the balance split
Close or convert the joint account
Contact Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion to remove financial association
Address all joint debts — mortgage, loans, credit cards
Update your will if your ex-partner was named as a beneficiary

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Joint accounts
  2. Citizens Advice — Money and debt after a breakup
  3. Surviving Economic Abuse