Bank Account Switching UK 2026 — Current Accounts, CASS and Switching Bonuses

Current Account Switch Service (CASS) — How to Switch Banks in 7 Days

How the Current Account Switch Service works, what transfers automatically, the switch guarantee explained, and what to do before and after switching banks in the UK.

Switching bank accounts used to mean weeks of admin — manually transferring direct debits, notifying every organisation, and hoping nothing fell through the gaps. The Current Account Switch Service (CASS) changed all of that when it launched in 2013. Today, a full switch between participating banks takes 7 working days, costs nothing, and comes with a formal guarantee that covers you if anything goes wrong.

This guide explains exactly how CASS works, what transfers automatically, what you still need to do yourself, and how to get the most from the process — including any switching bonus on offer. It is part of the Bank Account Switching hub, which covers current account comparisons, switching bonuses, and how to open and close accounts.

How CASS works: the full process

The key thing to understand about CASS is that the new bank does the work — you do not need to contact your old bank at all.

Step What happens Who does it
1 Open your new account You (online, in-app, or in branch)
2 Request a switch You (through the new bank — they handle everything from here)
3 Choose a switch date You (at least 7 working days ahead)
4 Everything transfers CASS moves balance, direct debits, standing orders
5 Old account closes Automatically on the switch date
6 Payments redirected Any payments to your old account go to the new one for 3 years

You simply open the new account, tell your new bank you want to switch, and pick a date. From that point, CASS and the two banks handle the rest.

What transfers automatically — and what does not

CASS moves the core of your account automatically, but a few things require manual action on your part.

Transfers automatically Detail
Account balance Full balance moved to new account on switch date
Direct debits All moved and set up on the new account
Standing orders All moved and set up on the new account
Incoming salary and other credits Payers are notified and redirected automatically
Payment redirect Any payments to old account forwarded for 3 years
Does NOT transfer automatically What to do
Linked savings accounts Set up new ones manually
Overdraft Apply with the new bank separately if you need one
Card payments for subscriptions Update Netflix, Amazon, Spotify etc. manually with new card details
Cash ISA Transfer separately using an ISA transfer form
International payment senders Update IBAN/BIC for anyone sending from abroad

The direct debits question is one of the most common worries people have before switching. Your new bank contacts every direct debit organisation on your behalf — you do not need to do it. For a detailed breakdown of how this works and what happens if a payment is sent to your closed account, see What Happens to Direct Debits When You Switch Banks?

The switch guarantee

The CASS guarantee is a formal commitment from all participating banks — not a promise in small print, but a binding obligation overseen by Pay.UK.

Protection Detail
7-working-day completion The switch must complete within 7 working days or the bank is in breach
Refund of losses If you incur interest or charges due to a switching error, you receive a full refund
3-year payment redirect Payments to your old account are forwarded automatically for 36 months
No-fault responsibility If an error occurs, it is the bank’s problem to fix — not yours

Over 10 million switches have been completed under CASS since 2013, with a completion rate above 99%. The guarantee makes switching as low-risk as it gets — the only real admin remaining is updating your card details for subscriptions, which CASS cannot handle because those are card payments rather than direct debits.

The 7-day timeline

Day What happens
Day 1 You open new account and request the switch
Days 2–6 New bank contacts old bank; payments arranged for transfer
Day 7 Switch completes — balance moves, old account closes
Day 7 onwards Direct debits and standing orders run from new account
Up to 3 years Payments to old account continue to redirect

The switch date must be at least 7 working days from when you request it. If you want to maximise the chance your next salary arrives in the right account, choose a switch date a few days after your pay date.

Why switch? The main reasons

Better value from your account

Some current accounts pay interest on positive balances, offer cashback on bills, or include bundled insurance products. Others have more competitive overdraft rates. The right account depends on how you use it — but if you have never compared, you are likely leaving value on the table.

Reason to switch What to look for
Switching bonus £100–£200+ cash paid within 30 days of meeting conditions
Interest on balance Accounts paying 1–5% AER on credit balances
Cashback on bills Accounts crediting a percentage of direct debit payments
Overdraft cost Annual rate varies from 15% to 40% EAR — worth comparing
App quality Budget tracking, savings pots, spending notifications
Packaged benefits Travel insurance, phone insurance, breakdown cover

Switching bonuses

Switching bonuses are currently the clearest single reason to switch if you are content with your banking otherwise. Typical conditions:

Requirement Typical
Minimum monthly deposit £1,000–£1,500/month
Minimum number of direct debits 2–3
Must use CASS Yes — partial switches usually do not qualify
New customers only Yes — existing customers usually excluded
Bonus paid Within 30 days of meeting conditions

For the current best offers and which banks are paying, see Best Bank Account Switching Bonuses UK 2026.

Full switch vs partial switch

You do not have to close your old account. A partial switch lets you move some payments without shutting the old account down — but it comes with fewer protections.

Feature Full switch Partial switch
Old account Closed Stays open
Balance transferred Yes Optional
Direct debits and standing orders All move You choose which
3-year payment redirect Yes No redirect
CASS guarantee Full Limited
Qualifies for switching bonus Usually yes Usually no

Most people doing a full switch for a bonus should use the full switch route. If you want to test a new bank while keeping an existing account open, a partial switch is available — but you will not get the redirect protection or any bonus.

Step-by-step guide

Before you switch

Action Why it matters
Check the new bank’s overdraft terms Your existing overdraft closes — confirm the new bank will offer one before switching
Note recurring card payments Subscriptions need manual updating after the switch
Check switching bonus conditions Confirm you qualify before starting
Review if your account has exit conditions Rare, but some packaged accounts have closure terms

If you do not yet have an account to switch to, How to Open a Bank Account walks through the process for all account types including accounts with no credit check.

During the switch

Step How
Open new account Online or in-app — most take under 10 minutes
Request a switch through the new bank They will ask for your old account sort code and number
Choose your switch date At least 7 working days away
Wait — the banks handle the rest You will receive confirmation messages from both banks

After the switch

Action When to do it
Check direct debits transferred Within the first statement cycle
Update card details for subscriptions Within 2 weeks — check Netflix, Amazon, Spotify and others
Confirm salary arrives correctly On next payday
Update HMRC if relevant For Child Benefit, tax refunds, or self-assessment refunds
Monitor the redirect for a couple of months Catches anything you may have missed

Which banks participate?

Almost all major UK banks and building societies are part of CASS.

Bank Participates
Barclays Yes
HSBC Yes
Lloyds Yes
NatWest Yes
Santander Yes
Nationwide Yes
Halifax Yes
Monzo Yes
Starling Yes
Chase Yes
First Direct Yes
TSB Yes
Co-operative Bank Yes
Virgin Money Yes

The full and current list is at currentaccountswitch.co.uk.

Common concerns

Concern Reality
“My salary won’t arrive” Payments redirect for 3 years — your salary will reach your new account
“Direct debits will fail” They transfer automatically under the CASS guarantee
“It is too complicated” The new bank does everything — you just choose a date
“My credit score will be affected” Switching does not affect your credit score
“I will lose my overdraft” Your existing overdraft closes — arrange the new one first if you need it
“I will have to contact loads of companies” Only for card-based subscriptions — direct debits move automatically

More in this cluster

Sources

  1. Current Account Switch Service
  2. Pay.UK — CASS guarantee
  3. FCA — Banking and payments