Map shows Surrey areas left with no banks after 'avalanche' of closures

Natwest stroe front
-Credit: (Image: Mark Kerrison/Getty Images)


Parts of Surrey are set to become one of Britain’s “banking deserts” where not a single bank branch remains open. Surrey has lost nearly 30 banks in just over two years - and our map shows all the branches that have closed and the banks due to shut this year.

Last week the number of branch closures since 2015 passed 6,000 according to Which? The consumer group said this “avalanche” of closures has had a major impact on the high street highlighting a need to provide replacement services for millions of people who relied on them.

Surrey has already lost one bank this year, the Barclays in Holly Parade, Cobham, which closed in February. This was the last bank branch in the area. Others include the Barclays in Esher, also the last one in the area.

Another three branches will shut before the end of the year. The NatWest in High Street, Woking, and the Halifax in High Street, Redhill, will both close in August, and the NatWest in High Street, Staines will shut in September.

Two other banks, the HSBC in Station Road, Oxted, and Barclays in The Borough, Farnham, are due to close but according to LINK no date has yet been confirmed. Including the banks that are scheduled to close, Surrey has lost 27 branches since February 2022.

You can see which banks are closing or have closed in your area using our interactive map.

Meanwhile, the rapid pace of closures shows no sign of letting up. Since February 2022 - when a voluntary agreement saw the major banking groups commit to assessing the impact of every closure - nearly 1,500 banks have either shut or announced their intention to close. That’s the equivalent of nearly two per day.

This month TSB announced it was shutting 36 branches, while in April RBS said it was closing 18 banks and Halifax said it was shutting a single branch. It means the major banks will shut at least 391 branches in 2024.

Announcing the closures on its website, TSB said it carried out a “full local analysis to understand the impact the change may have on the community” before making a decision to shut any branch or change the opening hours.

TSB said it remains committed to face-to-face services, but added: “To make sure our branch services reflect the current and future needs of our customers, we want to keep open the branches that are used the most. But sometimes this means that we have to close some branches or reduce our opening hours.”

RBS said: “The way people bank with us has changed dramatically in recent years, with an increased demand for mobile and online services as customers benefit from a faster and easier way to bank. Closing a branch is a decision we take very seriously.”

Consumer group Which? has been tracking bank closures since 2015. In that time it estimates that 60% of the banking network has been lost.

Sam Richardson, deputy editor of Which? Money, said: “While some may hardly notice the closure of their local branch as they seamlessly switch to online banking, for others reliant on face-to-face services, the impact can be disastrous.”

The LINK initiative launched in 2022 - which was agreed by all the major banks including Barclays, HSBC, Natwest, Lloyds, and Halifax - was set up to ensure vulnerable customers and small businesses were not left behind in the switch to cashless payments and virtual banking.

Every branch closure is now assessed and when it leaves a community without any local bank, then banking hubs or free ATMs are set up to fill the gap.

For more news across Surrey, visit our homepage here.