£600k in refunds over NatWest ‘bundling’

More than 700 small businesses will receive refunds following Competition and Markets Authority action against NatWest after it wrongfully forced them to open current accounts to secure a loan, which cost money.

by | 31 Aug, 2022

NatWest was issued with legal directions by the CMA after it broke banking rules. The CMA has found that NatWest breached CMA banking rules by forcing business customers to open a business current account, which incurs fees, in order to secure a loan — a practice known as “bundling”.

As such, hundreds of businesses have been charged monthly for a business account that they may not have wanted or needed. It also limited businesses’ choice as they were unable to hold an account with a separate provider, which may have better met their requirements.

The breach lasted for more than three years, with NatWest failing to alert the CMA until January 2021. Having scrutinised the error more closely, the CMA became aware the bank had signed certain customers up to a business account, when they had specifically requested to have a fee-free account.

Adam Land, CMA senior director of remedies, said forcing businesses to open costly current accounts to secure essential loans is unacceptable — and a direct breach of our rules, which have been in place for 20 years.

The CMA has now issued legal directions to NatWest, and the bank is in the process of refunding affected customers. NatWest will now write to all affected SME customers with a business account to offer them the option of switching to a fee-free loan servicing account.

The move comes as part of the CMA’s crackdown on breaches of its banking rules. Over the past four years, it has put a stop to bundling by HSBC, Danske Bank, Clydesdale Bank, and Lloyds, as well as securing millions in refunds in relation to overdraft charges: £17 million for Santander customers, £11 million for Metro Bank customers, £8 million for HSBC customers, and £7 million for Nationwide customers.

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