Banking

SME banking dispute resolution scheme set to close


Eligible small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) with a business banking complaint have been urged to register ahead of the Business Banking Resolution Service (BBRS) closing to new registrations on 13 December.

SMEs which think they may have an unresolved eligible complaint against their bank should contact the BBRS to see if it can help, according to a new statement.




The BBRS, which is wholly funded by its seven participating banks – Barclays, Danske Bank, HSBC UK, Lloyds Banking Group, NatWest Group, Santander UK and Virgin Money – was originally intended to close in 2023, but was given a temporary extension to operate beyond this deadline.

Since its inception in 2021, the BBRS has encouraged eligible SMEs to register their complaints, with more than £2m of financial redress made as a result of its intervention.

Many cases have had non-monetary resolutions, such as changes in loan terms, adjustments to debt recovery arrangements or interest rates, and adjustments to or cancellations of personal guarantees.

Despite these efforts, the BBRS has seen much lower case numbers than originally forecast at its inception. Independent research from Bayes Business School, commissioned by the BBRS in 2021 to investigate the low caseload, concluded that there were only 1,600 possible cases in scope for the BBRS.

Further independent research commissioned by the BBRS and conducted through Public First, which spoke to 522 senior SME decision-makers within the BBRS’ remit, found 86% were satisfied or very satisfied with their banks.

The evidence, data and current case volume therefore suggest the customer base anticipated for the BBRS is not there and that the demand is insufficient for the BBRS to operate on a permanent basis.



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