Santander to close 95 UK branches, putting 750 jobs at risk

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Santander is to close a fifth of its branches in the UK as part of an overhaul of its network, putting 750 jobs at risk.

The retail bank said it would shut 95 out of its 444 high street outlets, and reduce the services or hours at a further 50-plus branches, by June to “better serve the changing needs of customers”.

The lender, which said in January that it was not planning any permanent closures this year, said it was also changing 18 branches to become “counter-free” and a further 36 would operate reduced hours.

“Closing a branch is always a very difficult decision and we spend a great deal of time assessing where and when we do this and how to minimise the impact it may have on our customers,” a spokesperson for Santander UK said. “As a business, we must move with customers and balance our investment across all the places where we interact with customers, to deliver the very best for them now and in the future.”

The bank said that in places where branches were being shut it would provide new “community bankers” who would provide face-to-face support for customers. These community bankers will visit weekly, as well as attending local banking hubs.

The restructure will leave Santander with 349 branches in the UK. This will comprise 290 full-service branches, 36 with reduced hours and 18 counter-free, as well as five “Work Cafés”, a concept the bank said it was rolling out globally.

Work Cafés will provide a “hub for local communities and businesses” that includes co-working space, superfast wifi and event space, according to the bank.

Santander said there had been a “rapid movement” of customers shifting their banking online, with a 63% increase in digital transactions since 2019.

Since 2019, financial transactions completed in branches have reduced by 61% in the same period. More than a fifth of current accounts are now opened digitally and the bank has had a 56% increase in mobile banking users.

“As customer behaviour changes, we are ensuring that our branches remain fit for the future,” the spokesperson said. “Our new combination of full-service branches, alongside Work Cafés, counter-free branches and reduced-hours branches, aims to provide the right balance between digital banking and face-to-face money management and guidance.”

Santander said that after the restructure, 93% of the UK population would continue to be within 10 miles of one of its branches.

The announcement comes after Lloyds Banking Group announced in January that it was to close a further 136 branches. The bank said it would close 61 Lloyds branches along with 61 Halifax and 14 Bank of Scotland sites, starting in May with completion of the closure plan in March next year.

Lloyds has about 932 branches but previously announced closures would take that figure down to 892 branches by the end of 2025. That includes 447 Lloyds Bank sites, 341 Halifax-branded branches and 104 Bank of Scotland locations.

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The closures announced in January will bring the total down to 756 by the end of March next year.

The full list of branches to close in 2025

  • Aberdare 24 June

  • Arbroath 17 June

  • Armagh 1 July

  • Blackwood 23 June

  • Blyth 5 August

  • Bognor Regis 14 July

  • Borehamwood 1 July

  • Brecon 25 June

  • Brixton 11 August

  • Caernarfon 7 July

  • Camborne 7 July

  • Canvey Island 5 August

  • Clacton 16 June

  • Cleveleys 23 June

  • Colne 14 July

  • Colwyn Bay 24 July

  • Crowborough 23 July

  • Croydon 16 June

  • Cumbernauld 7 July

  • Didsbury 8 July

  • Downpatrick 6 August

  • Dungannon 23 June

  • Edgware Road London, 12 August

  • Eltham 23 June

  • Exmouth 15 July

  • Falmouth 21 July

  • Farnham 29 July

  • Felixstowe 16 July

  • Finchley 6 August

  • Fleet 30 June

  • Formby 11 August

  • Gateshead 16 June

  • Glasgow St Vincent St, 24 June

  • Glasgow The Avenue, Newton Mearns, 23 June

  • Greenford 24 June

  • Hackney 15 July

  • Hawick 24 July

  • Herne Bay 8 July

  • Hertford 29 July

  • Holloway 14 July

  • Holywell 13 August

  • Honiton 14 July

  • Kidderminster 18 June

  • Kilburn 17 June

  • Kirkby 22 July

  • Launceston 16 June

  • Louth 17 June

  • Magherafelt 24 June

  • Malvern 2 July

  • Market Harborough 1 July

  • Musselburgh 30 June

  • New Milton 28 July

  • Peterhead 16 June

  • Plympton 14 August

  • Portadown 30 June

  • Pudsey 28 July

  • Rawtenstall 15 July

  • Ross-On-Wye 30 July

  • Ruislip 7 July

  • Rustington 5 August

  • Saltcoats 21 July

  • Seaford 15 July

  • Shaftesbury 23 July

  • Sidcup 11 August

  • St Austell 8 July

  • St Neots 30 July

  • Stokesley 31 July

  • Strabane 23 July

  • Surrey Quays London, 10 November

  • Swadlincote 30 June

  • Tenterden 7 July

  • Torquay 17 June

  • Tottenham 8 July

  • Whitley Bay 6 August

  • Willerby 13 August

  • Wimborne 4 August

  • Wishaw 22 July

In addition, a date has yet to be announced for when these sites will close:

  • Bexhill

  • Billericay

  • Dover

  • Droitwich

  • Dunstable

  • East Grinstead

  • Holyhead

  • Ilkley

  • Larne

  • Lytham St Annes

  • Maldon

  • Morley

  • North Walsham

  • Redcar

  • Saffron Walden

  • Turriff

  • Uckfield

  • Urmston

Further details about the closures and branch changes can be found here.

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