Sort code


Sort codes are the domestic bank codes used to route money transfers between financial institutions in the United Kingdom, and formerly in Ireland. They are six-digit hierarchical numerical addresses that specify clearing banks, clearing systems, regions, large financial institutions, groups of financial institutions and ultimately resolve to individual branches. In the UK they continue to be used to route transactions domestically within clearance organizations and to identify accounts, while in Ireland they have been deprecated and replaced by the Single Euro Payments Area systems and infrastructure.
The sort code is usually formatted as three pairs of numbers, for example 12-34-56. It identifies both the bank and the branch where the account is held. Sort codes are encoded into International Bank Account Numbers but are not encoded into Business Identifier Codes.
Sort codes for Northern Ireland branches of banks were registered with the Irish Payment Services Organization for both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. These codes are used in the British clearing system and historically in the Irish system.

History

Codes began to be used in the early 20th century to facilitate the manual processing of cheques. Known as a 'national code', these had between three and five digits.
The eleven London clearing banks were each allocated a main number, with the "big five" allocated single-digit numbers alphabetically. Lloyds Bank, for example, was allocated 3 and National Provincial was allocated 5. The remaining single digit codes were used to indicate that a cheque was from outside the London clearing system. The smaller clearing banks were allocated two-digit numbers, for example Martins Bank was allocated 11.
The bank branches were allocated further digits by their bank to make up the entire number; some banks represented these on cheques in smaller type. Main clearing branches would have only one digit after the main number, e.g. 111. Metropolitan branches had two digits after the main number, e.g. 1124. Country branches made up the rest of the country, and used three or more digits after the main number, e.g. 11056. They were displayed on cheques in this fashion, with the bank identifier taking precedence.
Six-digit "sorting codes" were introduced in a staggered process from 1957 as the banking industry moved towards automation. The national codes were retained, but where a single digit was used to identify the bank a two-digit range was introduced. So, for example, Barclays codes went from starting with a 2 to 20, Midland from 4 to 40, etc.
CodeBank
1Bank of England
2Barclays
3Lloyds Bank
4Midland Bank
5National Provincial
6Westminster Bank
7Walks
8Scottish clearing
9Irish clearing
11Martins Bank
15Glyn, Mills & Company
16Williams Deacon's Bank
17National Bank
18Coutts

List of sort codes of the United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom the initial digits of bank sort codes were originally allocated to settlement members of the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company and the Belfast Bankers' Clearing Company. Today, sort codes are issued to any organisation that will be a direct member of a UK electronic payment network. Non-standard sort codes are issued to payment service providers who need an IBAN, for example for SEPA, as the sort code forms part of this.
The allocation of sort codes is managed by Bacs. These numbers are six digits long, formatted as three pairs separated by hyphens.

Cheque clearing

The cheque clearing system in the United Kingdom is managed by Pay.UK, following the merger of the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company, Bacs and Faster Payments Ltd in 2018. Since August 2019, sterling cheque clearing has been through the Image Clearing System.

England and Wales

In the following list the dates in brackets give the year of merger with the present-day sort code holder, or its subsidiary.
RangeBankNote
00For IBAN use only
01NatWestFormerly District Bank
04"Utility bank"04 is used by a large number of new financial institutions. Issued to new participants in the BACS, CHAPS and Faster Payments schemes.
Not usable for cheques. See next table.
05Clydesdale BankTrading as Yorkshire Bank
07-00 to 07-49Nationwide Building Society
08The Co-operative Bank
08-60 to 08-61The Co-operative BankFor building societies
08-60-64 for Virgin Money
08-90 to 08-99The Co-operative Bank
08-30 to 08-39Citibank08-31 to 08-32 for UK Government banking
09-00 to 09-19Santander UKFormerly Abbey National
09-00 to 09-19Santander UK
09-01-31 to 09-01-36

09-01-39 to 09-01-49 for Alliance & Leicester

09-01-51 to 09-01-56 migrated accounts
10-00 to 10-79Bank of EnglandPreviously used for government banking and BoE employee accounts
11Bank of ScotlandFor Halifax,
earlier used by Martins Bank
12-00 to 12-69Bank of ScotlandFor Sainsbury's Bank
13Barclays
14Barclays
15Royal Bank of ScotlandFormerly Williams & Glyn's Bank,
itself formerly Glyn, Mills & Company
15-80Royal Bank of ScotlandFor Child & Company private bank,
part of The Royal Bank of Scotland
15-98 to 15-99Royal Bank of ScotlandFor C. Hoare & Co, independent private bank
16Royal Bank of ScotlandFormerly Williams & Glyn's Bank,
itself formerly Williams Deacon's Bank
16-00-38 for Drummonds Bank, part of The Royal Bank of Scotland

16-52-21 for the Cumberland Building Society

16-57-10 for Cater Allen Private Bank, part of Santander Group
17Royal Bank of ScotlandFormerly Williams & Glyn's Bank,
itself formerly The National Bank
18Royal Bank of ScotlandFor Coutts, a subsidiary of NatWest
19Royal Bank of Scotland
20 to 29Barclays
20-11-47 for HMRC

23-00-88 for VFX Financial

23-05-05 for Stripe

23-05-80 for Metro Bank

23-14-70 for Wise

23-22-21 for Fire Financial Services

23-32-72 for Pockit

23-59-54 for Newcastle Building Society

23-69-72 for Prepay Technologies

23-73-24 for Loot Financial Services
30 to 39Lloyds Bank and TSBFormerly Lloyds TSB
and earlier for Lloyds Bank
30-00-66for Arbuthnot Latham Private Bank

30-00-83for Al Rayan Bank

30-02-48for FinecoBank UK
40 to 49HSBC UKFormerly Midland Bank

49-99-79 to 49-99-99 for Deutsche Bank

40-12-50 to 40-12-55 for M&S Bank

40-47-58 to 40-47-87 for First Direct

40-51-78 for Jyske Bank Gibraltar

40-51-98 for Turkish Bank UK

40-60-80 for CashFlows

40-63-01 for the Coventry Building Society

40-63-77 for Cynergy Bank Limited

40-64-05 to 40-64-16 for Tesco Bank

40-64-25 for Virgin Money

40-64-37 for Marcus
50 to 59NatWestFormerly National Provincial Bank
60 to 66NatWestFormerly Westminster Bank
60-01-73 for Reliance Bank Limited

60-83-12 for Atom Bank

60-83-14 for Gibraltar International Bank

60-83-66 for Fidor Bank UK

60-83-71 for Starling Bank

60-84-00 for Zopa

60-84-07 for Chase UK
60-93-03 for Weatherbys Bank Limited
60-95-34 for Handelsbanken UK personal accounts
70Used by various international banks for their UK business: no longer issued.Banks including:
Bank of Baroda
National Bank of Pakistan
Close Brothers Group
Bank Hapoalim
71Bank of EnglandNational Savings Bank
72Santander UKFormerly Alliance & Leicester,
itself formerly Girobank
77-00 to 77-44Lloyds Bank and TSBFormerly Lloyds TSB
and earlier for Trustee Savings Bank
77-46 to 77-99Lloyds Bank and TSBFormerly Lloyds TSB
and earlier for Trustee Savings Bank