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World Economy
Mar 26, 2026

NS&I Admits £476m in Missing Savings for Bereaved Families

AI Summary
National Savings & Investment (NS&I) faces a scandal over £476m in missing payments to bereaved families due to an administrative error. The state-owned savings bank has apologized and is working to rectify the issue.

National Savings & Investment (NS&I), a state-owned savings bank in the UK, has admitted to a long-running administrative error that has resulted in nearly £500m in missing payments to bereaved families. The bank's chief executive, Dax Harkins, was forced out amid the scandal.

NS&I, which holds over £240bn for 24 million customers, has been accused of a series of errors dating back years. The bank allegedly lost track of investments and withheld premium bond prizes from the families of deceased savers. Some families had to pay lawyers to recover their money.

The pensions minister, Torsten Bell, confirmed that 37,500 bereavement claims were potentially affected, with a total value of £476m. He stated that the problem had been reported to ministers in December last year and that NS&I's new CEO, Sir Jim Harra, would work to resolve the issue.

NS&I has apologized for the errors, stating that it had identified an issue where the estates of deceased customers were not always repaid money from all of their accounts after a bereavement claim. The bank has introduced robust measures to ensure this does not happen again.

To rectify the situation, NS&I will publish a plan in May detailing how people will be reunited with their money. The plan will confirm the number of missing payments and how the representatives of estates will be contacted. Estates may receive interest on savings as well as compensation. The government has promised that the cash is '100% safe' and that returning it will not present an additional liability to the taxpayer.