If my bank goes out of business, how much can I get back?
Customer deposits held by banks, building societies and credit unions in the UK that are authorised (ie given permission to operate) by the PRA are protected by the FSCS up to £120,000. This includes deposits in:
- current accounts
- savings accounts
- cash ISAs
- savings bonds
The deposit protection limit applies on a per-person basis. So, if it is a joint account, each account holder is protected up to £120,000. In other words, a joint account with two holders would be protected up to £240,000.
But a PRA-authorised firm may own several banking or building society brands. For example, HSBC operates under brands including HSBC Private Banking and First Direct. This means that anyone who has accounts under different brands owned by the same firm is still only protected up to £120,000 across all those accounts.
There is also temporary protection for up to six months above the £120,000 limit for certain types of deposits classified as temporary high balances (THBs), eg the proceeds from a private property sale. This temporary protection will be up to £1.4 million in most cases, although there is no limit for THBs that are linked to personal injury or incapacity.
People with eligible deposits that add up to more than the protection limit may wish to split their funds across different PRA-authorised firms.
The deposit protection limit rose from £85,000 to £120,000 on 1 December 2025, for firms that fail from that date. For firms that failed before then, the previous limit of £85,000 still applies.