Sunderland Echo

Counter culture in decline

Number of bank and building society branches continues to fall

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The proportion of people living near major banks and building societies shrank in the third quarter of 2021 as branches were closed, according to figures from the City regulator.

However, Post Office branches helped to maintain overall cash access levels.

An estimated 95.5% of the UK population were within 2km of a free-to-use cash access point and 99.7% were within 5km in the third quarter of 2021, the FCA said.

These overall figures include access to banks, building societies, Post Office branches and ATMs.

Coverage estimates are unchanged from the second quarter of 2021, the FCA said.

However, it said the types of available access points did change compared with the previous quarter.

The number of bricks-andmortar branches of the larger banks and building societies providing personal current accounts continued to fall, as 224 (4%) ceased to do this.

Coverage by these branches decreased from 60.1% to 59.6% of the UK population at 2km and from 87.5% to 87.4% at 5km.

An increase in the availabili­ty of Post Office branches offset the reduction.

The number of free-to-use

ATMs declined, but the impact on coverage appears negligible, the FCA said.

There was a small increase in bank and building society branches’ opening hours in the third quarter of 2021, from 34 hours per week on average in the previous quarter to 35 hours.

However, around 81% of these branches were still operating on reduced opening hours compared with February 2020, the FCA said.

Among branches, 62% of larger personal current account providers and 54% of other branches reported that they are wheelchair accessible, have step-free access and have a hearing/induction loop – a similar number to the previous quarter.

Some 78% of Post Office branches (excluding mobile and outreach branches) have both wheelchair access and a hearing/induction loop, an increase of three percentage points from the previous quarter, the FCA said.

About 14% of larger personal current account providers and 9% of other bank and building society branches were temporaril­y closed for at least one day during the third quarter of 2021 due to coronaviru­s and other reasons.

The FCA gathers data on access to cash on a quarterly basis alongside the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR). It measures distances “as the crow flies”.

People in rural areas travel further to access services compared with the urban population.

Around 99.7% of people living in urban areas in the UK had access to a free source of cash within 2km, falling to 77.4% in the rural population.

Overall, the FCA estimates that 99% of the UK rural population have access to a free source of cash within 5.7km.

Including cashback as a source of cash alongside all other access points, the FCA estimated that, overall, 99% of the UK population were within 2km of a source of cash and 99.9% were within 5km of a cash source.

The FCA said it has seen areas that need improvemen­t – for example firms relying on remote research when looking at alternativ­e services rather than an on-site assessment of the options. This could mean they missed factors which could have been picked up by visiting, such as footpaths and stepped access.

Areas for improvemen­t also included firms’ plans not being sufficient­ly altered to take into account consumer feedback on the impact of a closure.

 ?? ?? A Post Office often offers the most local access to cash
A Post Office often offers the most local access to cash

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