A new Which? analysis reveals the best and worst financial companies, as voted by their customers.
The consumer watchdog’s study shows First Direct has again topped the table for customer satisfaction; however many of the big high street banks are still stuck near the bottom.
Which? asked more than 20,000 members of the public, in four independent surveys, how happy they are with their current account, savings, mortgage or credit card provider.
It then analysed the results to find the best and worst banking providers.
[box style=”2″]
THE RESULTS:
- First Direct got an impressive overall score of 74 per cent with people saying they liked being able to speak to friendly and well-informed staff at any time of the day, without having to use an automated system.
- All of the UK’s biggest banks came in the bottom half of the table, with the exception of Santander which came 11th with a score of 58 per cent.
- Satisfaction with building societies was generally high across all product areas and mutuals took six of the top 10 places. Customers said they liked that they operate in a more ethical way and are not seeking profits for shareholders.
- Coventry Building Society (66 per cent) and Nationwide (65 per cent) took second and third place respectively.
- Ulster Bank, which has suffered a number of technical issues in the past couple of years, came last with just 45 per cent.
[/box]
Which? executive director Richard Lloyd says: “With the high street banks failing to score top marks for customer satisfaction it’s clear they still have a long way to go to restore consumer trust.
“Banks must ensure they put customers first and offer genuinely good value products and services if they want to compete with the best.”
In a separate investigation, Which? tested the online security of the 10 biggest banks and newcomer Metro Bank, to see if they had made changes since an investigation last year found some banks were vulnerable to attacks.
Several banks have improved with Nationwide moving up from seventh to first place with a score of 79 per cent (compared to 69 per cent last year) and Metro Bank coming second with 76 per cent.
Santander remains bottom, despite addressing a key concern and improving its score dramatically from 47 per cent to 64 per cent.