NS&I to contact bereaved families owed £367m after missing savings scandal
National Savings and Investments (NS&I) will begin contacting thousands of families next week regarding £367 million in missing savings owed to deceased customers. An estimated 34,000 estates are affected by long-running problems with tracing accounts of customers who had died.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedNational Savings and Investments (NS&I) will begin contacting thousands of families next week regarding £367 million in missing savings owed to deceased customers. An estimated 34,000 estates are affected by long-running problems with tracing accounts of customers who had died. The interim chief executive, Sir Jim Harra, apologized, stating the issue should not have happened and that NS&I is now repaying these funds. The errors occurred because the search process for bereavement claims failed to identify all relevant NS&I products. While operational processes have been changed to prevent recurrence, the new, more thorough search process is taking longer, causing delays. NS&I will contact personal representatives and executors of estates with holdings of £10 or more directly, with payments expected to be completed in the first half of 2027. Payments will be adjusted upwards to compensate for delays, and these sums will be exempt from inheritance and income tax.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedPayments will be adjusted upwards by the higher of accrued interest or the Bank of England base rate plus one percentage point.
The total amount owed to bereaved families has been revised down to £367m, affecting up to 34,000 estates.
NS&I will contact thousands of families affected by a missing savings scandal next week.
The issue was resolved for current and new bereavement claims from January 2026.
NS&I aims to return holdings to their rightful owners as swiftly as possible and expects to have completed this remediation programme in the first half of 2027.