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HSBC and First Direct Slash Interest Rates on Regular Savings Accounts

18

October 2019
HSBC and First Direct Slash Interest Rates on Regular Savings Accounts

HSBC and First Direct Slash Interest Rates on Regular Savings Accounts

HSBC and its internet-based bank First Direct have slashed the interest rates on their regular savings accounts from 5% to 2.75%.

The rate cuts means only M&S, which is also partly owned by HSBC, is offering 5% interest rates on regular savings.

Nationwide Building Society previously offered 5% interest on its regular savings account but scrapped the product earlier this year.

The next best rate on the market currently is 3%, offered by Virgin Money (digital), Saffron Building Society (postal accounts), and Kent Reliance (branch-based).

Those rates are a far cry from the 6% First Direct offered on its regular savings account until 2016.

Regular savings accounts are available to those with a current account from the bank and who can commit to making regular payments into savings.

They’re a good option for people looking to develop savings discipline and build a nest egg for the first time.

Customers pay a steady amount into the account each month and then receive the interest at the end of the year.

HSBC and M&S allow customers to deposit between £25 and £250 a month into these accounts, for a total savings of up to £3,000 a year.

First Direct customers can sock away between £25 and £300 a month, or up to £3,600 a year.

In return for these regular payments and other restrictions, including limits on withdrawals, banks offer customers higher interest rates than they would see on standard easy-access accounts.

But recent interest rate cuts and withdrawal of some regular savings accounts from the market have cast the future of these accounts into doubt.