Bank error in your favour. Collect £1,000

Find out what you are entitled to when you transfer money to the wrong account by accident, or when money is mistakenly transferred to yours.
Even if banking errors are quite rare, they will still affect a lot of people. For example, if just 0.01% of transactions are errors and we process one billion transactions a year. That would make around 100,000 errors, which might explain why there's a small stream of readers' complaints about banks' mistakes.
If you transfer money to the wrong account
Not all errors are the banks' fault. One small slip from us: typing a 9 instead of a 0, and we haven't sent our mortgage deposit to Clydesdale Bank but to a 16-year-old in Amble by the Sea, who mysteriously becomes the youngest yacht owner between here and Helsinki.
If you transfer money to the wrong current account, your bank should hopefully contact the other bank, which should contact its customer and ask him to refund the money. However, as it's not your bank's fault, that's as far as you can expect it to go if the customer ignores the refquest.
It's sometimes fair to get a refund
You can get lucky though. The complaints body, the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS), recently wrote about a Mr D who mistakenly transferred £75 through the Internet to the wrong person by entering the wrong account number. Yet Mr D had got the name right, so he couldn't understand how the bank made the error.
The FOS examined the bank's processes. Banking industry guidance states that consumers should be warned if payments will be processed using just the account number and there was no such warning on the bank's website. It told the bank to reimburse Mr D.
Bank error in your favour – but not for long
It's not normally the bank's job to compensate you for loss through your own mistakes, but the FOS also takes the view that the bank is allowed to reclaim money that it pays you in error.
Recent question on this topic
- bluesky asks:
If a financial institution gives you money is it yours?
- SoftwareBear answered "He should return the letter with a reply stating that the account is not his. No point withdrawing..."
- SmudgeButt answered "Most likely explanation is that you father's account was being looked at for some reason by the..."
- Read more answers
When £1,000 was transferred to Mr A's account, the bank mistakenly duplicated the transaction and credited £2,000. Two weeks later the bank asked Mr A to repay the money, but he said he'd already spent it. The bank said it could accept ten instalments of £100. Mr A complained to the FOS.
The FOS didn't uphold Mr A's complaint. There was no evidence to suggest he expected more than £1,000, or more than one transfer, and yet a statement sent to him a few days after the transaction took place clearly showed two £1,000 credits on the same day with the same reference details.
An inconvenient truth
There are exceptions. Sometimes you can even get compensation if a bank credits money to your account in error.
Mrs V received a cheque for £103,960 after closing her savings account. A few days later, the bank asked her to return £1,460, due to miscalculated interest.
The FOS accepted Mrs V's point that the bank should have got its calculations right and that she was disappointed, but the error had not caused her any financial loss and the bank had quickly tried to correct its mistake. However, in recognition of the disappointment and inconvenience it caused her, the FOS said it should allow her to keep £50.
A holiday paid by the bank
In some circumstances, when banks make mistakes, you can collect more than a modest £50 in your favour.
Mrs M paid a cheque of £100 into her account and the bank credited £1,000. The customer later checked her balance through a cash machine and found a lot more money than she expected. She went into the branch and queried it with the cashier, who confirmed that was her correct bank balance.
Mrs M had recently retired and she knew another colleague received a significant tax rebate when he retired, so she presumed she too had been sent a rebate. Close to four months later the bank sent a demand for her to repay the money, but she had already spent it on a holiday with her niece. The bank wanted to set up a monthly repayment plan.
The FOS ruled that she didn't have to repay on the basis that it was reasonable for her to think that the money was hers, because the cashier had confirmed it. As she couldn't ordinarily afford the holiday (and therefore couldn't pay the money back easily), and as she had bought something with no resale value, the bank couldn't recover any money.
If an error occurs and you think that your bank is wholly or partially to blame, it's worth complaining. If that doesn't work you can complain to the FOS, who could award compensation. Your final recourse is to take your bank to court.
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In September i had 10k paid into my savings account in error at first i thought it was a win from online bingo which i put £10 on once a month and was shocked when it appeared on my accounts ba;ance when checked my online banking but yet pleased as i am a single mum on maternity split from my partner living back at my mum's house and awaiting a council home and couldnt believe my luck to see this amount in my account as i have never seen more than £700 in my account i had it spent in my head on new funiture for when i got my new home for me and my son. I got ready to go shopping then thought i better just double check with the online banking to which i found i had not had a win and then i realised it must be someone elses money to which i called my bank and reported it they said they would investigate and be intouch withing 7 working days 10 working days past to which i had no call,letter or anymore information yet the money was still in my account i then called again i had made 4 more calls to the bank which they kept telling me a letter was in the post and it never was i then made another call saying i had recieved no letter and i did not want the responsibilty of someone elses money in my account they then said i had no letter in the post they had a letter sent to the person that made the payment to see if it was in error and they then would inform me. By this time as you can imagine i was at my wits end i had never been so stressed worrying that i had a big amount of money in my account that belonged to someone else and i didnt want the responsibility of looking after this money as if i spent any by error such as direct debt wrongly taking it or over spending by a penny or so when shopping there was a chance of going to prison for something that was not my error so i decided to open another account which i didnt even require just so i could put this money in a safe place so i didnt go into it by mistake i recieved a letter on friday asking for it back as it was an error yet again i have had to call them to correct this error which is not my fault now eventually the money has been payed back to the correct owner but i have been so stressed with this issue it seriously has had an impact over my life for the past month i have been stressed i have run up a phone bill on calls over £50 and it doesnt seem alot but it is when your a single mum on statutory maternity pay and been stressed has had an impact on mine and my babys bond as he can pick up on my stress i wish the bank and the people of this money could only understand that it isnt just them that have problems when they have money going missing and that sometimes the reciever have a hard time.
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I have recently received a refund back into my account in error from an insurance company - the insurance has been cancelled and they have now noticed the error and are requesting the money is paid back - am I legally obliged to repay the money back even though I no longer have the insurance?
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Doesn't it require a bank error in order to transfer money to the wrong person even if the account number is incorrect? Ie your transfer requires a name as well as an account-number, so technically the transfer shouldn't go ahead if the name and account-number don't match. Am I wrong in this assumption?
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31 October 2011