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BackLloyds Banking Group to axe Halifax brand, consolidate under Lloyds
Lloyds Banking Group to axe Halifax brand, consolidate under Lloyds
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Guardian UK6d agoBusiness3 min readUnited Kingdom

Lloyds Banking Group to axe Halifax brand, consolidate under Lloyds

Quick Look

  • Lloyds Banking Group will phase out the Halifax brand, migrating all accounts to Lloyds branding by early 2027.
  • While no branches will close, the move ends the 173-year-old former building society's presence on UK high streets and has drawn criticism from loyal customers.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Lloyds Banking Group is phasing out the Halifax brand to consolidate under its main Lloyds brand. This move aims to streamline operations and leverage innovation, though it sparks controversy due to Halifax's long history and customer loyalty.

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Lloyds Banking Group has announced it is axing the Halifax brand, scrubbing the 173-year-old former building society’s name from UK high streets.

The group will stop opening new accounts under the Halifax brand and kickstart a process of shifting existing accounts to Lloyds branding over the coming days.

The group, which has 531 branches overall, will start dismantling signage at the 190 Halifax-branded sites from early 2027. No branches will be closed as a result of the changeover.

The decision, first reported in May, has proved controversial among loyal customers and people who live in the West Yorkshire town the chain is named after. It follows a review of Lloyds’ branding strategy that began earlier this spring.

The group has operated under three brands – Lloyds, Halifax and Bank of Scotland – since January 2009, when the financial crisis and a series of bad business decisions brought the combined Halifax-Bank of Scotland (HBOS) group to its knees.

The overhaul means Lloyds will be the group’s sole brand in England, Wales and Northern Ireland from next year, although Bank of Scotland will be retained for customers in Scotland.

The bank has assured customers that sort codes and account numbers will not be affected by the brand migration plan.

However, axing Halifax would mean getting rid of one of the most recognisable and historic lenders on the UK high street. The former building society traces its roots to the mid-1800s, when housing shortages and overcrowding prompted the founding of the Halifax Permanent Benefit Building Society, which allowed members to earn interest on deposits and borrow funds to buy or build their own home.

It later grew into a UK-wide lender and by 1928 held the title as the largest building society of its kind in the world. Decades later, Thatcher-era changes led to the lender’s demutualisation in the mid-1990s, turning Halifax into listed bank before merging with Bank of Scotland in 2001.

However, by 2008 a string of bad business decisions put HBOS at risk of collapse, resulting in a government-brokered deal for Lloyds to rescue the group with the help of £20bn in taxpayer cash.

The HBOS brand was later tarnished by a notorious banking scandal, as it emerged that managers at its Reading branch were pushing small business customers into failure and stripping them of assets.

But despite the controversy and bailouts, Lloyds may still have to contend with pushback from loyal customers and people from Halifax, who have banked with the former building society for decades.

Lloyds’ consumer relations boss, Jas Singh, said: “As Halifax changes to Lloyds, our Halifax customers will keep everything they know and love today – the same fantastic app design, the same friendly faces in our branches – even the same sort code and account number. But as Lloyds customers, they’ll get the best innovation and experiences we offer.

“Our Lloyds customers are already benefiting from a significant investment into propositions like Club Lloyds, Lloyds Premier, Lloyds Ultra and Lloyds Rewards – and now we’re really excited that Halifax customers can bank on Lloyds for more.”

The news comes weeks before the Lloyds chief executive, Charlie Nunn, is due to announce a strategic plan for the group alongside half-year results at the end of July. His current five-year plan, which will come to a close in December, involved a big shift towards digital and mobile banking.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Lloyds Banking Group will complete the migration of Halifax accounts to Lloyds branding.

    Very likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will customer loyalty shift entirely to Lloyds?
  • What is the long-term financial benefit of this consolidation?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian UK.

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