The banking giant is set to rebrand its Halifax operations under the Lloyds name
Lloyds Banking Group is preparing to scrap its Halifax brand in a decision that will bring the curtain down on the retail bank’s 173-year presence on the high street.
The FTSE 100 giant – which also owns Bank of Scotland and Scottish Widows – announced on Wednesday it would absorb Halifax into the overarching Lloyds name.
Lloyds maintained the shake-up would streamline its customer service operations by consolidating around a single main consumer banking division.
“There are no changes to previously announced plans for branches, and there are no role reductions as part of today’s announcement,” said Jas Singh, Lloyds’ chief executive of consumer relations.
The bank will start removing Halifax signage from its 190 branches in early 2027. From next year, Lloyds will stand as the group’s only brand across England, Wales and Northern Ireland, as reported by City AM.
Lloyds was established in Birmingham in 1765, while Halifax takes its name from the West Yorkshire town where it began life as a building society in 1852.
Halifax relinquished its mutual status in 1997 when it floated on the London Stock Exchange, but ceased trading independently four years later following a merger with Bank of Scotland to create HBOS.
Lloyds stepped in to rescue HBOS in 2009 amid the financial crisis, bringing the firm’s brands into its stable.
The bank emphasised it remained committed to its presence in the town of Halifax, highlighting a recent £116m investment in its Trinity Road office in Halifax town centre. Around 3,000 Lloyds employees are based in the town.
The development arrives amidst a broader transformation for the banking sector on the high street.
Santander is reportedly considering proposals to remove TSB from the high street following its nearly £3bn landmark acquisition last year.
The decision would bring to a close TSB’s 215-year presence on Britain’s high street. The transaction, which was unveiled last July, incorporated TSB’s five million customers, £34bn in mortgages and £35bn in deposits into its portfolio.
Other significant consolidation activity in recent years has included Barclays’ £600m acquisition of Tesco’s banking division last year, which enabled it to return £700m to shareholders through an incremental share buyback. HSBC also extended its partnership with M&S banking arm in 2024, which permits the grocer to utilise its credit offering.
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