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Halifax will disappear from the high street after 173 years

Metro Published Jul 1, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Halifax began as a building society in 1852 and first went public on the stock market in 1997 as a bank.
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Halifax merged with Bank of Scotland in 2001, growing to become one of the most well-known brands on the UK high street.
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Halifax will disappear from the UK high street after 173 years, with all customer accounts transitioning to Lloyds, as confirmed by Lloyds Banking Group.
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Lloyds Banking Group employs approximately 3,000 staff at its Trinity Road office in Halifax, and no job cuts are being announced as part of the rebranding and branch consolidation plan.
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Lloyds Banking Group, which includes Lloyds Bank, Halifax, and Bank of Scotland, plans to close a number of branches throughout the remainder of 2024.
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Halifax is being ditched after over 170 years on the UK’s high street.

All customer accounts will be changed to Lloyds over time, Lloyds Banking Group has said.

The news comes after the banking giant, which includes Lloyds Bank, Halifax, and Bank of Scotland, revealed plans to close a number of branches throughout the remainder of this year.

Jas Singh, Lloyds Banking Group’s chief executive of consumer relationships, 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.

Lloyds said it remained committed to the town of Halifax and the wider Yorkshire and Humber region, where some 3,000 staff are based at its Trinity Road office.

No job cuts are being announced as part of the shake-up, and Halifax branches will either be rebranded to Lloyds or merge with a Lloyds branch nearby throughout 2027.

Earlier this month, Lloyds said closures to its high street branches are happening because customers have shifted to online banking, preferring to use the mobile app, the website, or to phone.

In May, it was reported that the bank could disappear – but a spokesperson said there were ‘no changes for our customers’ at that point.

Customers are no longer able to open new accounts with Halifax on the app or website as of today.

Halifax began as a building society in 1852, first going on the stock market in 1997 as a bank.

They merged with Bank of Scotland in 2001 and grew to become one of the most well-known brands on the high street.

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