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Financial services contributed a tenth of UK economic output in 2025 

City PM Published Jun 3, 2026 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
The financial services industry boosted the UK's real GDP by £290bn in 2025, representing around 11% of total output.
290 GBP · boost to UK’s real GDPabout 11 · of total output
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Citation-ready fact
As of February 2026, UK banks had £582bn in outstanding loans to businesses, with approximately one-third lent to small and medium-sized enterprises.
582 GBP · outstanding loans from UK banks to businessabout 0.33 · of outstanding loans lent to small- and medium-sized enterprises
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Citation-ready fact
TheCityUK report stated that the market swing was supported by the Bank of England's decision in August 2024 to cut interest rates for the first time since 2021.
2021 · previous Bank of England interest rate cut
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Citation-ready fact
Productivity in the financial services sector was 2.6 times higher than that of the whole economy.
2.6 times · productivity in financial services sector compared to whole economy
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Mortgage lending surged 20.4% year-on-year in 2025, reaching £296.2bn.
20.4 year-on-year · mortgage lending surge296.2 GBP · mortgage lending
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Citation-ready fact
The total amount spent on individual pension annuities reached a post-2014 high of £7.4bn in 2025.
7.4 GBP · total amount spent on retirement products2014 · reference year for post-high spending
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Citation-ready fact
The UK's private credit market grew by 43% between 2013 and 2024.
43 · growth of UK’s private credit market
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Citation-ready fact
Interest rates peaked at 5.25% in 2024 and were reduced to 3.75% by the end of 2025.
5.25 · peak interest rates3.75 · interest rates
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The financial services sector contributed over a tenth of the UK’s economic output in the last year as the industry’s productivity outpaced average momentum. 

The industry provided a £290bn boost to the UK’s real GDP – a macroeconomic measure that adjusts the value of economic output for inflation – in 2025 marking around 11 per cent of total output, according to TheCityUK’s latest UK Key Facts report. 

Productivity across the sector – which also includes related professional services industries such as accounting – was 2.6 times higher than that of the whole economy by measure of total values of goods and services produced per hour.

“Beyond these headline macroeconomic indicators, the data in our report underline the industry’s broader enabling role within the economy,” wrote TheCityUK’s chief economist Anjalika Bardalai.

She added maintaining the competitiveness of this industry remains critical at a time when the broader economic environment continues to be “shaped by geopolitical developments, technological change and rapidly evolving market conditions.” 

The government has framed their economic plan around the financial services sector, which Rachel Reeves has said sits at the “heart” of its growth plan.

In the King’s Speech, it launched its Enhancing Financial Services bill, which aimed to boost the industry through reforms to regulation and help unlock a deeper pool of capital for small businesses.

Major UK banks beefed up their lending to smaller businesses in the last year, according to the report. Of the £582bn in outstanding amount of loans from UK banks to business as of February 2026, around a third of this was lent to small- and medium-sized enterprises.

Mortgage lending staged a mammoth recovery, surging 20.4 per cent year-on-year in 2025 to £296.2bn. It came as the market steadily rebounded from the restrictive grip of high interest rates that peaked at 5.25 per cent – a post-financial crisis high – in 2024 but were gradually whittled down to 3.75 per cent by the end of 2025.

TheCityUK report said the swing in the market was “supported by the Bank of England’s decision in August 2024 to cut interest rates for the first time since 2021.”

The changing monetary climate also drove savers to opt for more guaranteed income streams, such as individual pension annuities. The shift pushed the total amount spent on these retirement products to a post-2014 high of £7.4bn in 2025. 

The report notes a trend of banks shifting from lending directly to instead acting as “strategic partners and financial backers” to private credit funds. The UK’s private credit market – which provides non-bank debt financing directly to companies – grew at a staggering 43 per cent between 2013 and 2024.

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