Mark Bridge
2 for 1 at Pizza Express
Most people have lost the likes of a bank card, umbrella or mobile phone at
some time. Surprisingly, though, many Britons also lose track of their
savings and current accounts. Up to £15 billion is held in about half a
million “dormant” accounts – where the bank or building society has been
unable to contact the holder – but now there is a free website dedicated to
reuniting this cash with its owners.
Mylostaccount.org.uk brings
together the tracing schemes of the British Bankers’ Association (BBA), the
Building Societies Association (BSA) and National Savings & Investments
(NS&I) – which also covers lost Premium Bonds – and allows users to
start a search online. This involves completing as much as possible of a
six-page form. To ease the ten-minute process, it is vital to have any
account information to hand.
Forms are checked and then forwarded. If you know that your money was with
HSBC, for example, your form goes to that bank’s tracing department. If you
know that it was with a building society, but do not remember which, the BSA
makes inquiries. And if you remember nothing about the account, beyond its
existence, the information is passed to all participating institutions – all
building societies and large banks. In the several cases where an
institution has been taken over or merged, your search is referred to its
successor.
Once you have submitted a search, you should hear back within three months,
or one month for NS&I-only searches. Money held in dormant accounts is
the property of the account holder and will remain so despite government
plans to tap into the funds for good causes from next year. And institutions
must keep basic account records indefinitely.
When an account is found, the institution will tell you how much money is in
it, with interest accrued, and how to access it. If, however, you do not
hear anything within the specified period, or the search draws a blank, you
should contact the relevant organisation, at www.bba.org.uk
or www.bsa.org.uk , or
the specific institution, where possible. Should this fail, go to the
Financial Ombudsman at financial-ombudsman.org.uk.
The web can help users to trace a range of further “lost” assets. Experi-an’s
Unclaimed Assets Register, for example, at UAR.co.uk,
has a data-base of life policies, pensions, unit trust holdings and share
dividends from many companies. This can be searched for £18, 10 per cent of
which is donated to Share Gift, the charity. For lost pensions, first try
the Government’s free tracing service at thepensionservice.gov.uk.
Another website of interest has a much narrower target. Restore UK, at restoreuk.org.uk,
is the BBA agency that aims to restore the British bank accounts of
Holocaust victims to their heirs.
CASE STUDY A PREMIUM FIND
GEMMA CARR lost track of her Premium Bonds when she moved to Caversham,
Berkshire, after studying in Edinburgh. The 29-year-old PhD student’s
grandfather had given her £100 of bonds at birth and she had won “the odd
£50” as a teenager, but she could not find any paperwork. “I called my
mother, who suggested NS&I’s tracing service,” she says.
Ms Carr used the paper-based tracing service, collecting a search form from
her local Post Office. She says that the process was quick and hassle-free.
It turned out that an £80 prize had been reinvested in the bonds early in
her childhood and that she had won £50 more recently. “I will keep the money
in the bonds,” she says. “You never know when you’ll get lucky.”
She adds that the new online service would have made the process even more
convenient.
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