The latest figures from the Current Account Switch Service has found more than 7million people have now switched their bank account since 2013.

But if that sounds cause for celebration, it’s just 1million more people than the number who switched energy supplier in 2020 alone. 

Indeed, the people who regularly switch bank accounts are a rarity, and are usually the ones happy to spend a few hours buried in paperwork in return for a cash switching bonus or other perks. 

But despite that paperwork switching is easy, with CASS pledging to switch your account and any direct debits over in seven days.

Find a more rewarding deal: Some accounts promise cashback, interest and freebies

The competition for current account customers resumed again after the end of the first coronavirus lockdown, with banks bringing back switching bonuses. 

Many of these have dried up again, however, while continued low interest rates and pressure on margins mean current account perks are not as generous as they used to be.

Nonetheless, if you’re unhappy with your current bank or spot a better deal elsewhere, that’s no reason not to switch. You can find our picks of the best accounts below. 

TOP ACCOUNTS FOR FREE CASH, INTEREST AND PERKS AT A GLANCE
Account Perks Conditions
First Direct 1st Account   £250 interest-free overdraft
£100 to switch away within 6 months if you don’t like the service 
If you want to leave and earn the bonus you need to pay in £1,000 for 6 months and have initially switched using CASS.
Nationwide FlexDirect 2 per cent interest on up to £1,500 and fee-free overdraft, both for the first year only though. Pay in £1,000 a month.
Halifax Reward The choice of £5 a month paid into your account, two film rentals or three magazine rentals or a free cinema ticket each month. £3 monthly fee or pay in £1,500 a month. Spend £500 on your debit card each month or maintain a balance of £5,000.
Club Lloyds  Pays 0.6 per cent on up to £4,000, and 1.5 per cent on £4,000 – £5,000. £3 monthly fee or deposit £1,500 a month, pay out two direct debits.
Santander 123 Santander will pay 0.6 per cent on balances up to £20,000 plus up to 3 per cent cashback on bills.
This is changing again on 12 April.
£5 a month fee. You must pay in £500 a month and maintain two active direct debits.
Royal Bank of Scotland/NatWest Reward  £5 a month back in rewards and 1 per cent back from certain partner retailers. £2 monthly fee. Must set up two direct debits for £4 a month, and then log into mobile banking once a month for £1 each.
Starling Bank current account  0.05 per cent interest on balances. Fee-free spending and ATM withdrawals abroad. Online and smartphone-only bank
Virgin Money  15 bottles of wine ‘worth £180’ to switch. Account pays 2 per cent monthly interest on up to £1,000 and comes with a linked easy-access account paying 0.5 per cent. Apply online, switch through CASS with two direct debits and pay in £1,000 to a linked easy-access account
Interest: Nationwide pays 2% on balances of up to £1,500

Interest: Nationwide pays 2% on balances of up to £1,500

Interest: Nationwide pays 2% on balances of up to £1,500

1. Best account for in-credit interest: Nationwide 

Current account in-credit interest is not what it used to be. 

Last April Nationwide Building Society’s FlexDirect account, which had helped Britain’s biggest mutual snap up more than half a million net switchers since 2013, saw its rate fall from 5 per cent to 2 per cent.

But at a time of low rates this is still the best interest-paying account out there. The rate is paid on balances of up to £1,500, and isn’t bad considering top easy-access deals pay just 0.5 per cent.

Holders must pay in a minimum monthly income of £1,000. On the last day of every month Nationwide will calculate the interest earned each day and then pay this interest on the first day of the next month. 

Holders are also eligible for a 0 per cent overdraft for the first 12 months, but after that they pay a whopping 39.9 per cent. 

Watch out

If your income drops and you can’t pay in £1,000, you won’t receive any interest that month.

The 2 per cent interest deal ends after a year, when it drops to just 0.25 per cent. So it may be worth looking elsewhere after the 12 months for a better return on your money.

You get an interest-free arranged overdraft for that 12 months, but after that overdraft fees are hefty.

Recent changes to its overdrafts mean customers will now pay a flat rate of 39.9 per cent interest when overdrawn, this will be costly for those who regularly stray into the red. 

George Nixon’s verdict

Accounts that are good for both in-credit and overdrawn customers are few and far between so this could be a good bet for those who have smaller balances – but can afford to pay in £1,000 each month, while the account still offers those benefits. 

Virgin Money last year launched a series of bundled incentives in a bid to attract hundreds of thousands of new current account customers

Virgin Money last year launched a series of bundled incentives in a bid to attract hundreds of thousands of new current account customers

Virgin Money last year launched a series of bundled incentives in a bid to attract hundreds of thousands of new current account customers

2. Best account for upfront freebies: Virgin Money

Sadly HSBC, NatWest and Royal Bank of Scotland have pulled their three-figure switching bonuses, meaning the best welcome bonus is not available in the form of cash. 

Instead, Virgin Money is offering ‘£180’ in the form of a 15-bottle case of wine to those who switch to it. Those who don’t drink can get an alcohol free case ‘worth £75’.

It’s part of a big new push for current account customers, along with in-credit interest of 2 per cent on up to £1,000 and discounts across Virgin Media’s range of broadband bundles.

Customers must apply online, move their account through the official switch service, register for mobile banking and set up two direct debits, which they must maintain until the offer code for their wine comes through.

They must also pay in £1,000 to a linked savings account which pays 0.5 per cent interest quarterly.

Watch out

While the 2 per cent in-credit interest, paid monthly, sees customers earn £20.20 a year, they will earn nothing if their current account balance exceeds £20.20. It’s also slightly less generous than the rate paid by Nationwide.

The ‘£180’ case of wine is likelier worth a lot less than a three-figure switching bonus, experts warned, and some other benefits of course require to stick with one major brand, Virgin, who might not offer you broadband coverage where you are or the best deal.  

George Nixon’s verdict

As Andrew Hagger, the personal finance expert and founder of Moneycomms, put it, ‘how many people remain loyal to a single brand these days?’ 

Cross-selling services might not be a winning strategy when people are increasingly happy to shop around for the best deals on broadband or gym memberships, with the former something you can easily find on This is Money itself.

But with cash switch bonuses disappearing once again, the 15-bottle case of wine, even if it’s one you can’t choose yourself, a decent in-credit interest offer and a cheaper overdraft of 19.9 per cent makes for one of the more compelling current account offers around at the moment.

What about overdraft rates? 

Previously, This is Money offered a guide to the best bank accounts for overdraft borrowers. 

Unfortunately, that guide is somewhat moot after almost all of Britain’s biggest banks hiked the cost of borrowing to nearly 40 per cent APR, more than double the cost of the average credit card.

This was in response to a crackdown on the cost of unarranged borrowing and the transparency of overdraft rates, which were often priced using daily fees which quickly added up.

Sadly, this means there isn’t a great deal of savings to be made, with almost all banks charging upwards of 35 per cent and HSBC, Lloyds, NatWest, Nationwide Building Society and Santander all charging 39.9 per cent. 

Instead, the best bet is to avoid being charged these fees in the first place, by using a fee-free buffer if it’s available. The best buffer is offered by HSBC offshoot First Direct, and offers £250 fee-free. 

Lloyds Bank: offers the best current account for interest on large balances

Lloyds Bank: offers the best current account for interest on large balances

Lloyds Bank: offers the best current account for interest on large balances

3. Best account for interest on a large balance: Lloyds

With multiple cuts to Santander’s 123 account over the last 12 months, and due to pay just 0.3 per cent on up to £20,000 from April 2021, Lloyds Bank’s Club Lloyds account is now probably a better offer, although the 123 account still offers up to 3 per cent cashback.

Club Lloyds pays 0.6 per cent on interest on balances of up to £3,999, while those with sums of between £4,000 and £5,000 will earn 1.5 per cent on that balance. This works out at around £39 interest if customers kept in the full £5,000 for a year, an interest rate of around 0.8 per cent. 

Overdrafts are charged at 29.9 per cent after a £50 interest-free buffer. There is no monthly fee if you pay in £1,500 a month, otherwise it charges £3.

George Nixon’s verdict

Cuts to current account interest mean the blended rate of around 0.8 per cent you can get from Club Lloyds on £5,000 is the best rate you can get on balances above £1,500, while the three-figure switch bonus is the joint-best around.

The rate itself is slightly better than the best easy-access rate around at the moment, meaning you’d only earn a little less if you wanted to stash it elsewhere. But if you have more than £5,000 burning a hole in your pocket, you should earn a slightly worse rate with another savings bank elsewhere.

4. Best ‘new kid on the block’: Starling Bank

Winner of ‘best British bank’ at the British Bank Awards three years in a row and gaining the second-highest number of net accounts through the switching service in the first nine months of 2020, digital challenger bank Starling is increasingly a force to be reckoned with. 

Originally a smartphone-only bank with an offering aimed largely at holidaymakers, the challenger, launched in 2016, has increasingly grown into a legitimate, even potentially profitable, challenger to Britain’s biggest banks.

Starling: The multiple award-winning smartphone challenger bank

Starling: The multiple award-winning smartphone challenger bank

Starling: The multiple award-winning smartphone challenger bank

Its current account can be downloaded through a smartphone app and can now also be managed online, and pays 0.05 per cent interest on up to £85,000. 

It offers instant spending notifications, compartmentalises spending into categories and lets accountholders create dedicated ‘spaces’ for their savings. 

Plus, it allows customers to use their card overseas with no fees and make unlimited ATM withdrawals, again, without fees.

Watch out

Starling doesn’t have any branches, which might cause an issue for some customers who want face-to-face banking, but customers can pay in cheques at 11,500 Post Office branches or using the app.

Like other banks, it also charges a potentially steep overdraft rate of up to 35 per cent on overdrafts, depending on customers’ credit scores, although this can be as low as 15 per cent.

George Nixon’s verdict

Starling gaining close to 40,000 accounts in the middle of a pandemic without offering customers any sweeteners suggests it must be doing something right, and the bank’s interface and the way in which it categorises transactions has been praised by customers and awards judges alike as intuitive and easy to use.

Some Britons may not be ready to fully embrace digital banking but with fee-free overseas spending and ATM withdrawals, perhaps they should consider trying it for their holiday spending, if and when holidays are once again allowed, and go from there.

The complete package? Not anymore

Like their regular cousins, packaged bank accounts have also become increasingly less generous in recent years. 

These accounts, which frequently offer interest, insurance and other perks bundled together, have also been the subject of concerns about mis-selling, with consumers potentially paying for deals they don’t need.

Plus, many of the accounts offering travel insurance will not pay out for any trips related to coronavirus. It means there is questionable value in actually applying for one of these accounts right now.

However, despite the cutbacks the best offer on the market is still likely Nationwide’s FlexPlus account. Its terms and conditions state it will not pay out on any coronavirus-related cancellation claims, but it does offer worldwide travel insurance provided by UK Insurance Ltd on trips of up to 31 days.

This includes cancellation cover of up to £5,000 and cover for medical expenses of up to £10million. 

It costs £13 a month and also comes with worldwide phone insurance on models costing up to £1,500 for you and your family, and European breakdown cover.

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This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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