UK Payments and Transactions Guide 2026 — Direct Debits, Transfers, Overdrafts and Digital Payments

Overdraft Guide UK — How They Work, Costs + Alternatives

How bank overdrafts work in the UK. Interest rates, arranged vs unarranged, how to get one, alternatives, and how to reduce overdraft debt.

An overdraft allows you to spend more than you have in your current account — essentially short-term borrowing from your bank. While convenient for emergencies, overdrafts at 35–40% EAR are expensive if used regularly. This guide covers how overdrafts work, what they cost, and how to reduce or eliminate reliance on one. For related topics on UK payment methods and what happens when payments go wrong, see the Payments and Transactions hub.

How Overdrafts Work

FeatureDetail
What it isPermission to go into a negative balance
How it is repaidAutomatically when money arrives in your account
InterestCharged daily on the overdrawn balance
Typical rate35–40% EAR (around 3% per month)
Credit checkRequired to arrange
Impact on credit fileReported monthly — heavy use can affect your score

Types of Overdraft

TypeHow it worksCost since April 2020
Arranged (authorised)Pre-agreed limit with your bankInterest only at the agreed EAR
Unarranged (unauthorised)Going overdrawn without permission, or exceeding your limitSame EAR as arranged — no extra fees since FCA reform
Interest-free bufferFirst £0–£500 with no interest (varies by bank)Free

Key change since 2020: Before the FCA’s overdraft reform, unarranged overdrafts often carried flat daily fees that worked out at APRs of hundreds of percent. These are now banned — banks must charge a single EAR rate applied to all overdraft borrowing.

Overdraft Costs Compared

Interest Rates by Bank

BankEARMonthly cost on £1,000
First Direct39.9%~£33
Monzo39.9%~£33
HSBC39.9%~£33
NatWest39.49%~£33
Nationwide39.9%~£33
Lloyds39.9%~£33
Starling15–35% (tiered)£12–£29

Starling is the notable exception with a tiered rate based on credit profile — some customers pay significantly less than the standard ~40% charged by most banks.

Interest-Free Buffers

BankInterest-free buffer
First Direct£250
M&S Bank£100
Nationwide FlexDirectNone
StarlingNone
MonzoNone

What Happens If You Exceed Your Overdraft?

If you spend beyond your arranged limit, or go overdrawn without an arrangement, your bank may decline the transaction — or allow it and charge the same interest rate as your arranged overdraft. For a detailed breakdown, see What Happens If You Go Over Your Overdraft.

How to Get an Overdraft

StepDetail
1Check if your current account includes an overdraft facility
2Apply online, via the bank’s app, or in branch
3Bank runs a credit check
4If approved, limit is set (typically £100–£3,000 for most accounts)
5Overdraft is available immediately

What Banks Consider

FactorImpact
Credit scoreHigher score = higher limit and potentially lower rate
IncomeRegular income increases confidence
Account historyGood management with this bank helps
Existing debtMay reduce what is offered
Previous overdraft useGood track record with overdraft helps

Overdraft vs Other Borrowing

FeatureOverdraftCredit cardPersonal loan
Interest rate35–40% EAR0–29.9% (purchases)6–15%
FlexibilityVery high — dip in and outHigh — revolvingFixed repayments
Minimum repaymentNone — auto-repaid when money arrivesMonthly minimumFixed monthly
Best forShort-term emergenciesPurchases you clear monthlyPlanned larger expenses

An overdraft at 39.9% EAR costs more than almost any personal loan. If you find yourself relying on an overdraft for more than a few days each month, switching to a personal loan to clear it — and then cutting the overdraft limit — typically saves significant money. See Personal Loans UK — Complete Guide for how to compare rates.

How to Reduce or Clear Your Overdraft

Step-by-Step Plan

StepAction
1Know the total — check exactly how much you owe
2Set a monthly reduction target — £50–£100 is achievable for most
3Request a gradual limit reduction — ask your bank to lower it as you pay down
4Automate savings — move a fixed amount to savings the day you are paid
5Budget with a framework — see the 50/30/20 rule to prioritise debt repayment

Options to Clear Faster

OptionHow it helps
0% balance transfer cardEliminates interest for 12–29 months — lets repayments attack the balance directly
Personal loanLower rate (6–15%) with fixed repayments — converts overdraft into structured debt
Use savingsIf overdraft rate (39.9%) exceeds savings rate — it almost certainly does
Increase incomeOvertime, side jobs, selling unused items
Cut spendingReview direct debits and subscriptions — redirect savings to the overdraft

Overdraft Alternatives

AlternativeBest for
Emergency fundPreventing the need for an overdraft in the first place
0% purchase credit cardShort-term spending — cleared monthly, zero cost
Personal loanPlanned larger expenses or clearing overdraft debt
Credit union loanLower rates than bank overdrafts for members
Salary advance appsVery short-term cash — check costs carefully before using

Building a small emergency fund of even £500–£1,000 removes most of the situations where an overdraft becomes necessary. Start by setting up an automatic transfer to a savings account on payday — even £25/month compounds into a meaningful buffer within a year.

If You Are Struggling

ActionDetail
Contact your bankThey may offer a repayment plan, temporary freeze, or hardship support
Switch to a basic bank accountCannot go overdrawn — prevents further spiralling
Free debt adviceStepChange and Citizens Advice offer free, confidential support
Breathing Space schemeGovernment scheme — freezes interest and enforcement for 60 days

For strategies to clear multiple debts, see Debt Repayment Strategies — including the avalanche and snowball methods. If you are considering a formal arrangement, Debt Management Plans Explained covers how they work and what they affect.

Sources

  1. FCA — Overdrafts reform
  2. MoneyHelper — Overdrafts
  3. StepChange — Overdraft debt