Lloyds Banking Group is preparing to scrap the Halifax brand after 173 years on the high street, in what would amount to one of the most significant rebrands in British banking history.
The FTSE 100 lender, which also owns Lloyds Bank, Bank of Scotland and pensions and investment business Scottish Widows, is reported to be drawing up plans to wind down Halifax as a standalone consumer-facing brand, with existing customers gradually migrated across to Lloyds Bank. According to The Sun, which first reported the story, new digital account applications through Halifax could be paused as early as July, with the brand expected to stop taking on new customers altogether by October.
A Lloyds Banking Group spokesperson said the company “regularly looks” at the role its brands play in supporting customers, but stressed there are “no changes for customers as of today” and that no final decision has been taken.
The end of a 173-year-old high-street name
If confirmed, the move would draw a line under a brand whose roots stretch back to 1853, when the Halifax Permanent Benefit Building and Investment Society was founded above a coffee house in the Yorkshire mill town that gave it its name. By 1913 it was the largest building society in the country, and its 1997 demutualisation, which turned 7.5 million members into shareholders, remains the biggest stock-market flotation of its kind in UK history.
Halifax merged with the Bank of Scotland in 2001 to form HBOS, before being absorbed into Lloyds Banking Group during the emergency rescue of the financial crisis in January 2009. It has since operated as a trading division of Bank of Scotland, sitting alongside Lloyds Bank within the same group while continuing to compete with it on the high street and online.
Why lloyds is consolidating
Industry analysts have long suspected that maintaining four overlapping consumer brands, Lloyds, Halifax, Bank of Scotland and Scottish Widows, would eventually become commercially unsustainable as more customers move to digital channels. With the differences between Lloyds and Halifax now largely cosmetic for many product lines, particularly mortgages and current accounts, consolidating onto a single retail brand would reduce marketing duplication, simplify technology spend and concentrate scale behind one black horse.
The shake-up also lands against a backdrop of accelerating physical retrenchment. The group has already confirmed plans for a fresh round of Lloyds, Halifax and Bank of Scotland branch closures running through 2026 and into 2027, affecting dozens of locations across the country.
More broadly, the House of Commons Library estimates that around 6,700 bank and building society branches have closed in the UK since January 2015 – roughly two-thirds of the network that existed a decade ago.
Lloyds is not alone in slimming down its brand portfolio. The recent decision to retire the TSB name from Britain’s high streets following Santander’s takeover of the lender underlines a broader pattern of UK banking consolidation in which long-standing high-street identities are being absorbed into larger corporate parents.
What it means for customers and SMEs
For existing Halifax customers, the group has indicated that any transition would be phased and that account numbers would remain unchanged. Customers who hold accounts with both Halifax and Lloyds will continue to benefit from separate Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) protection limits because of the way the group is structured, an important point for savers and small businesses with balances above the £85,000 single-bank threshold.
For SMEs in particular, the implications are more strategic than administrative. Halifax has historically been a significant mortgage lender to self-employed borrowers, contractors and owner-managers, often willing to underwrite cases on as little as one year of accounts, and a familiar route into homeownership for staff at small businesses. Folding the brand into Lloyds reduces the optical diversity of the UK lending market, even where the underlying balance sheet remains the same, and may concentrate decision-making in fewer hands.
Consumer group Which? has repeatedly warned that successive waves of branch closures and brand consolidation are narrowing choice for vulnerable customers and small firms, particularly in market towns where rival fascias are increasingly run from the same back office.
The Treasury’s Access to Banking Review, launched to assess the impact of branch withdrawals across the UK, is now expected to face fresh political pressure if one of the country’s most familiar high-street names is also removed from the skyline.
A defining moment for british banking
Quietly retiring Halifax would mark a defining moment in the long-running consolidation of UK retail banking, the point at which the post-2008 patchwork of legacy brands finally gives way to a smaller number of dominant digital-first names. Lloyds will be acutely aware of the sentimental power of a 173-year-old high-street fixture, and of the political sensitivity around access to face-to-face services.
For now, the group is keeping its options open. But for customers, small businesses and the wider market, the signal is unmistakable: the era in which Lloyds Banking Group ran two parallel retail high-street brands is drawing to a close.
Read more:
Lloyds set to scrap Halifax brand after 173 years in major high-street shake-up










