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Sort code

Sort codes are the domestic bank codes used to route money transfers between financial institutions in the United Kingdom, and in the Republic of 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 the Republic of Ireland (a founder member of the Euro) they have been deprecated and replaced by the SEPA systems and infrastructure.

Sort codes for Northern Ireland branches of banks (codes beginning with a '9') were registered with the Irish Payment Services Organization (IPSO) for both Northern Ireland and the Republic. These codes are used in the British clearing system and historically in the Irish system.

The sort code is usually formatted as three pairs of numbers, for example 12-34-56. It identifies both the bank (in the first digit or the first two digits) and the branch where the account is held.[1] Sort codes are encoded into IBANs but are not encoded into BICs.

History Edit

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" (and the Bank of England) 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 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 (usually major London branches) would have only one digit after the main number, e.g. 111. Metropolitan branches (which covered Greater London) 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.[2] 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.[3]

Clearing bank code allocations
Code Bank
1 Bank of England
2 Barclays Bank
3 Lloyds Bank
4 Midland Bank
5 National Provincial
6 Westminster Bank
7 Walks
8 Scottish clearing
9 Irish clearing
11 Martins Bank
15 Glyn, Mills & Co.
16 Williams Deacon's Bank
17 National Bank
18 Coutts & Co.

List of sort codes of the United Kingdom Edit

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 (in addition to the cheque clearing systems, this includes BACS, Faster Payments and CHAPS). 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 into three pairs which are separated by hyphens.

Cheque clearing Edit

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 Edit

In the following list the dates in parentheses give the year of merger with the present-day sort code holder, or its subsidiary.

Range Bank Note
00 For IBAN use only[4]
04 "Utility bank" Issued to new participants in the BACS, CHAPS and Faster Payments schemes; not usable for cheques[4]
04-00-02 BFC Bank
04-00-03 to 04-00-08 Monzo
04-00-11 Satabank
04-00-40 Starling Bank
04-00-53 Payrnet/Railsbank
04-00-72 to 04-00-74 Modulr
04-00-75 Revolut
04-00-76 LCH Limited
04-00-78 Elavon Financial Services
04-00-79 to 04-00-80 Virgin Money Head Office
04-03-00 to 04-03-29 LHV Pank
04-04-05 ClearBank
04-04-76 to 04-04-77 Enumis
04-05-40 to 04-05-41 BCB Group
04-13-01 Midpoint & Transfer
04-13-02 to 04-13-03 Bilderlings Pay
04-13-04 to 04-13-05 Ecology Building Society
04-13-06 Allpay Limited
04-13-07 to 04-13-08 Clear Junction
04-13-12 Modulr
04-13-13 to 04-13-14 Project Imagine
04-13-15 to 04-13-16 Universal Securities & Investment
04-13-17 to 04-13-19 Contis Financial Services
04-13-42 Duesday
Range Bank Note
01 National Westminster Bank Formerly District Bank (1962)
05 Clydesdale Bank Trading as Yorkshire Bank
07-00 to 07-49 Nationwide Building Society
08 The Co-operative Bank
08-60 to 08-61 For building societies [nb 1]
08-60-64 for Virgin Money (ex Northern Rock accounts)
08-90 to 08-99
08-30 to 08-39 Citibank 08-31 to 08-32 for UK Government banking (NS&I, HMRC etc.)
09-00 to 09-19 Santander UK Formerly Abbey National (2010)

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 10-79 Bank of England Previously used for government banking and BoE employee accounts[5]
11 Bank of Scotland For Halifax (since 1990),
earlier used by Martins Bank (1962-1969)
12-00 to 12-69 For Sainsbury's Bank
13 Barclays Bank
14
15 The Royal Bank of Scotland Formerly Williams & Glyn's Bank (1985),
itself formerly Glyn, Mills & Co (1970)
15-80 For Child & Co. private bank,
part of The Royal Bank of Scotland (1923)
15-98 to 15-99 For C. Hoare & Co, independent private bank
16 The Royal Bank of Scotland Formerly Williams & Glyn's Bank (1985),
itself formerly Williams Deacon's Bank (1970)

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

17 Formerly Williams & Glyn's Bank (1985),
itself formerly The National Bank (1970)
18 For Coutts & Co, a subsidiary of National Westminster Bank (1920)
19
20 to 29 Barclays Bank

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
23-69-72 for Prepay Technologies
23-73-24 for Loot Financial Services

30 to 39 Lloyds Bank and TSB Formerly Lloyds TSB (2013)
and earlier for Lloyds Bank (1995)

30-00-66for Arbuthnot Latham Private Bank
30-00-83for Al Rayan Bank
30-02-48for FinecoBank UK

40 to 49 HSBC Bank Formerly Midland Bank (1992)

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
40-64-25 for Virgin Money
40-64-37 for Marcus

50 to 59 National Westminster Bank Formerly National Provincial Bank (1968)
60 to 66 Formerly Westminster Bank (1968)

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

60-84-07 for Chase UK (JP Morgan)

70 Used by various international banks for their UK business: no longer issued.[4] Banks including the Bank of Baroda, the National Bank of Pakistan as well as Close Brothers Group and Bank Hapoalim
71 Bank of England National Savings Bank
72[nb 1] Santander UK Formerly Alliance & Leicester (2010),
itself formerly Girobank (1985)
77-00 to 77-44 Lloyds Bank and TSB Formerly Lloyds TSB (2013)
and earlier for Trustee Savings Bank (1995)
77-46 to 77-99

Scotland Edit

Separately operated by the Committee of Scottish Clearing Bankers until 1985.

Range Bank Note
80 to 81 Bank of Scotland
82 Clydesdale Bank
83 The Royal Bank of Scotland formerly National Commercial Bank of Scotland (1969),
formerly Commercial Bank of Scotland (1959)
84 formerly National Commercial Bank of Scotland (1969),
formerly National Bank of Scotland (1959)
86
87 TSB formerly Lloyds TSB Scotland (2013)
formerly TSB Scotland (1995)
89-00 to 89-29 Santander UK formerly Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank (2010)
formerly Girobank (2003)

Northern Ireland Edit

The clearing system in Northern Ireland was operated under the Belfast Clearing Rules which were agreed by the Belfast Bankers' Clearing Company (formerly the Belfast Bankers' Clearing Committee), until the introduction of the Image Clearing System managed by Pay.UK which was completed in August 2019.[6] Sort codes in the 90 range are managed by the Irish Payment Services Organisation (IPSO).

Range Bank Note
90 Bank of Ireland
91 Northern Bank trading as Danske Bank since 2012
formerly Belfast Bank (1970)
93 Allied Irish Banks (UK) for AIB (Northern Ireland)
formerly First Trust Bank
formerly TSB Northern Ireland (1991)
94 Bank of Ireland
95 Northern Bank trading as Danske Bank since 2012
former Midland Bank subsidiary (1965)
98 Ulster Bank subsidiary of National Westminster Bank (1917)

Sort codes of the Republic of Ireland Edit

Sort codes are no longer directly used in the Republic of Ireland, although they still form part of the underlying structure of account numbers. As a part of the Eurozone, all aspects of the SEPA system are fully implemented and adhered to. This means that all domestic transactions, including Direct Debit and interbank transfers are processed using an IBAN through the SEPA system. The Irish electronic clearing systems, including those run by the Irish Retail Electronic Payments Clearing Company Ltd, which entered voluntary liquidation in late 2014, have been retired and replaced by SEPA. Domestic cheques continue to be processed by the Irish Paper Clearing Company CLG.[7]

Historically, the Irish banking system shared the sort code structure used in the UK, but operated as a separate system since the Irish pound broke the link with sterling in March 1979. Codes are issued by the Banking and Payments Federation Ireland (BPFI)[8] which replaced IPSO in 2014.[9]

The full list of sort codes used in Ireland is as follows:

Note: A large number of lower volume users and smaller banks share the 99 XX XX code and there are at least three users of the 93 XX XX codes assigned primarily to AIB.

Range Bank Note
90 Bank of Ireland
92 Central Bank of Ireland
93 AIB Bank

93-09-03 for JP Morgan Bank Ireland plc
93-90-21 for EBS d.a.c.

95 Danske Bank (Ireland) trading as Danske Bank
98 [nb 1] Ulster Bank Ireland dac
99-06 to 99-07 Permanent TSB
Range Bank Note
99 99 is used by a large number of financial institutions, particularly those with smaller branch networks or a single branch.
99-00-51 to
99-00-52
Citibank Europe plc
99-00-61 to
99-00-62
Bank of America
Realex Financial Services
99-02-04 The Royal Bank of Scotland
99-02-06 BNP Paribas Ireland
99-02-12 Barclays Bank Ireland
99-02-31 HSBC Bank
99-02-40 ING Bank
99-02-60 Rabobank International
99-02-70 KBC Bank Ireland
99-03-01 An Post
99-03-20
for Aareal Bank
99-03-25 for CACEIS Bank
99-03-60 for Revolut Bank UAB
99-04 Bank of Scotland
99-10 BNP Paribas Ireland for Irish Credit Unions
99-11-99 Fire Financial Services
99-21 to 99-22 Irish Credit Unions
99-99-01
Central Bank of Ireland for the

Paymaster General of Ireland
Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC)

Irish bank account numbers are now presented in the IBAN format as follows:

IE97 BANK 9799 9912 3456 78

This corresponds to the fictitious sort code: 97-99-99 and account: 12345678, prefixed by ISO Country code: IE, IBAN check digits 97 and Bank Identifier: BANK

Codes in the 70 range – "walks" Edit

Numbers starting with a '7' (after the 1960s, '70') were reserved for the large number of London offices of banks which were not members of the London Clearing. Individual sort codes were allocated on a one-off basis to the many London offices of private and foreign banks. Cheques drawn on these banks were colloquially known within the banking industry as 'walks' because they were cleared by being hand-delivered ("walked") to the drawee banks by messengers from the Clearing House.[10] By the 1990s, most of these banks had been issued with sort codes within the ranges of the various clearing banks which, from then on, acted as clearing agents for them; the practice of "walking" cheques was ended. For cheques drawn on banks that had not made such an arrangement, the cheques were posted to the drawee bank, who would settle them by a cheque drawn on a clearing bank.[10]

International clearance Edit

Within the Eurozone, only IBAN numbers are required. Transfers to and from the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia and any other countries outside the Eurozone continue to use international networks and require a combination of IBAN (or a domestic account and sorting/routing code) alongside a BIC code to identify the institution sending and receiving payments. Characters 9 to 14 of British and Irish IBANs hold the bank account sort code.[11]

In some countries there is no direct equivalent of sort codes as the bank and branch codes are maintained separately from each other in those countries.[11] Other countries, however, have or had codes which are equivalent to sort codes, but with formats unique to the country concerned. Examples include:

The codes listed above for Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Sweden are incorporated into the IBANs for those countries.

See also Edit

Sources Edit

  • UK Clearings Directory 2005 (p. 297) The Association for Payment Clearing Services

References Edit

  1. ^ "Sort Code Information for Republic of Ireland". Irish Payment Services Organisation Ltd. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  2. ^ "Martins Bank". www.martinsbank.co.uk.
  3. ^ "Six Digit NAICS Codes & Titles". NAICS Association. Retrieved 12 September 2023.
  4. ^ a b c "Clearing Code Rules" (PDF). UK Sort Codes Information. February 2020.
  5. ^ Topham, Gwyn (17 July 2016). "Bank of England to close personal banking service for employees". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 November 2016.
  6. ^ "Belfast Bankers' Clearing Company". Cheque and Credit Clearing Company.
  7. ^ "Banking & Payment Federation Ireland - About us - Payments". www.bpfi.ie. July 2018.
  8. ^ "Sort Code database". BPFI. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  9. ^ "About BPFI". Banking and Payments Federation Ireland. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  10. ^ a b Capie, Forrest; Webber, Alan (1985). A Monetary History of the United Kingdom: 1870-1982. Routledge. pp. 289–290. ISBN 04-15381150.
  11. ^ a b (PDF). SWIFT. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 November 2013. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  1. ^ a b c Being phased out

External links Edit

  • Clearing Codes Rules – the rules for sorting codes, managed by Bacs
  • Faster Payments sort code checker – shows which payment systems are supported for a given UK sort code
  • Identify a bank from the sort code – display bank, branch and contact information
  • Find branch, clearing information and SWIFT BIC from a sort code - shows branch details, clearing information and equivalent SWIFT BIC

sort, code, domestic, bank, codes, used, route, money, transfers, between, financial, institutions, united, kingdom, republic, ireland, they, digit, hierarchical, numerical, addresses, that, specify, clearing, banks, clearing, systems, regions, large, financia. Sort codes are the domestic bank codes used to route money transfers between financial institutions in the United Kingdom and in the Republic of 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 the Republic of Ireland a founder member of the Euro they have been deprecated and replaced by the SEPA systems and infrastructure Sort codes for Northern Ireland branches of banks codes beginning with a 9 were registered with the Irish Payment Services Organization IPSO for both Northern Ireland and the Republic These codes are used in the British clearing system and historically in the Irish system The sort code is usually formatted as three pairs of numbers for example 12 34 56 It identifies both the bank in the first digit or the first two digits and the branch where the account is held 1 Sort codes are encoded into IBANs but are not encoded into BICs Contents 1 History 2 List of sort codes of the United Kingdom 2 1 Cheque clearing 2 2 England and Wales 2 3 Scotland 2 4 Northern Ireland 3 Sort codes of the Republic of Ireland 4 Codes in the 70 range walks 5 International clearance 6 See also 7 Sources 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditCodes 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 and the Bank of England 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 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 usually major London branches would have only one digit after the main number e g 111 Metropolitan branches which covered Greater London 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 2 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 3 Clearing bank code allocations Code Bank1 Bank of England2 Barclays Bank3 Lloyds Bank4 Midland Bank5 National Provincial6 Westminster Bank7 Walks8 Scottish clearing9 Irish clearing11 Martins Bank15 Glyn Mills amp Co 16 Williams Deacon s Bank17 National Bank18 Coutts amp Co List of sort codes of the United Kingdom EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sort code news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message 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 in addition to the cheque clearing systems this includes BACS Faster Payments and CHAPS 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 into three pairs which are separated by hyphens Cheque clearing Edit 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 Edit In the following list the dates in parentheses give the year of merger with the present day sort code holder or its subsidiary Range Bank Note00 For IBAN use only 4 04 Utility bank Issued to new participants in the BACS CHAPS and Faster Payments schemes not usable for cheques 4 04 00 02 BFC Bank04 00 03 to 04 00 08 Monzo04 00 11 Satabank04 00 40 Starling Bank04 00 53 Payrnet Railsbank04 00 72 to 04 00 74 Modulr04 00 75 Revolut04 00 76 LCH Limited04 00 78 Elavon Financial Services04 00 79 to 04 00 80 Virgin Money Head Office04 03 00 to 04 03 29 LHV Pank04 04 05 ClearBank04 04 76 to 04 04 77 Enumis04 05 40 to 04 05 41 BCB Group04 13 01 Midpoint amp Transfer04 13 02 to 04 13 03 Bilderlings Pay04 13 04 to 04 13 05 Ecology Building Society04 13 06 Allpay Limited04 13 07 to 04 13 08 Clear Junction04 13 12 Modulr04 13 13 to 04 13 14 Project Imagine04 13 15 to 04 13 16 Universal Securities amp Investment04 13 17 to 04 13 19 Contis Financial Services04 13 42 DuesdayRange Bank Note01 National Westminster Bank Formerly District Bank 1962 05 Clydesdale Bank Trading as Yorkshire Bank07 00 to 07 49 Nationwide Building Society08 The Co operative Bank08 60 to 08 61 For building societies nb 1 08 60 64 for Virgin Money ex Northern Rock accounts 08 90 to 08 9908 30 to 08 39 Citibank 08 31 to 08 32 for UK Government banking NS amp I HMRC etc 09 00 to 09 19 Santander UK Formerly Abbey National 2010 09 01 31 to 09 01 36 09 01 39 to 09 01 49 for Alliance amp Leicester09 01 51 to 09 01 56 migrated accounts10 00 to 10 79 Bank of England Previously used for government banking and BoE employee accounts 5 11 Bank of Scotland For Halifax since 1990 earlier used by Martins Bank 1962 1969 12 00 to 12 69 For Sainsbury s Bank13 Barclays Bank1415 The Royal Bank of Scotland Formerly Williams amp Glyn s Bank 1985 itself formerly Glyn Mills amp Co 1970 15 80 For Child amp Co private bank part of The Royal Bank of Scotland 1923 15 98 to 15 99 For C Hoare amp Co independent private bank16 The Royal Bank of Scotland Formerly Williams amp Glyn s Bank 1985 itself formerly Williams Deacon s Bank 1970 16 00 38 for Drummonds Bank part of The Royal Bank of Scotland16 52 21 for the Cumberland Building Society16 57 10 for Cater Allen Private Bank part of Santander Group17 Formerly Williams amp Glyn s Bank 1985 itself formerly The National Bank 1970 18 For Coutts amp Co a subsidiary of National Westminster Bank 1920 1920 to 29 Barclays Bank 20 11 47 for HMRC23 00 88 for VFX Financial23 05 05 for Stripe23 05 80 for Metro Bank23 14 70 for Wise23 22 21 for Fire Financial Services23 32 72 for Pockit23 69 72 for Prepay Technologies23 73 24 for Loot Financial Services30 to 39 Lloyds Bank and TSB Formerly Lloyds TSB 2013 and earlier for Lloyds Bank 1995 30 00 66for Arbuthnot Latham Private Bank30 00 83for Al Rayan Bank30 02 48for FinecoBank UK40 to 49 HSBC Bank Formerly Midland Bank 1992 49 99 79 to 49 99 99 for Deutsche Bank40 12 50 to 40 12 55 for M amp S Bank40 47 58 to 40 47 87 for First Direct40 51 78 for Jyske Bank Gibraltar40 51 98 for Turkish Bank UK40 60 80 for CashFlows40 63 01 for the Coventry Building Society40 63 77 for Cynergy Bank Limited40 64 25 for Virgin Money40 64 37 for Marcus50 to 59 National Westminster Bank Formerly National Provincial Bank 1968 60 to 66 Formerly Westminster Bank 1968 60 01 73 for Reliance Bank Limited60 83 12 for Atom Bank60 83 14 for Gibraltar International Bank60 83 66 for Fidor Bank UK60 83 71 for Starling Bank60 84 07 for Chase UK JP Morgan 70 Used by various international banks for their UK business no longer issued 4 Banks including the Bank of Baroda the National Bank of Pakistan as well as Close Brothers Group and Bank Hapoalim71 Bank of England National Savings Bank72 nb 1 Santander UK Formerly Alliance amp Leicester 2010 itself formerly Girobank 1985 77 00 to 77 44 Lloyds Bank and TSB Formerly Lloyds TSB 2013 and earlier for Trustee Savings Bank 1995 77 46 to 77 99 Scotland Edit Separately operated by the Committee of Scottish Clearing Bankers until 1985 Range Bank Note80 to 81 Bank of Scotland82 Clydesdale Bank83 The Royal Bank of Scotland formerly National Commercial Bank of Scotland 1969 formerly Commercial Bank of Scotland 1959 84 formerly National Commercial Bank of Scotland 1969 formerly National Bank of Scotland 1959 8687 TSB formerly Lloyds TSB Scotland 2013 formerly TSB Scotland 1995 89 00 to 89 29 Santander UK formerly Alliance amp Leicester Commercial Bank 2010 formerly Girobank 2003 Northern Ireland Edit The clearing system in Northern Ireland was operated under the Belfast Clearing Rules which were agreed by the Belfast Bankers Clearing Company formerly the Belfast Bankers Clearing Committee until the introduction of the Image Clearing System managed by Pay UK which was completed in August 2019 6 Sort codes in the 90 range are managed by the Irish Payment Services Organisation IPSO Range Bank Note90 Bank of Ireland91 Northern Bank trading as Danske Bank since 2012formerly Belfast Bank 1970 93 Allied Irish Banks UK for AIB Northern Ireland formerly First Trust Bank formerly TSB Northern Ireland 1991 94 Bank of Ireland95 Northern Bank trading as Danske Bank since 2012 former Midland Bank subsidiary 1965 98 Ulster Bank subsidiary of National Westminster Bank 1917 Sort codes of the Republic of Ireland EditSort codes are no longer directly used in the Republic of Ireland although they still form part of the underlying structure of account numbers As a part of the Eurozone all aspects of the SEPA system are fully implemented and adhered to This means that all domestic transactions including Direct Debit and interbank transfers are processed using an IBAN through the SEPA system The Irish electronic clearing systems including those run by the Irish Retail Electronic Payments Clearing Company Ltd which entered voluntary liquidation in late 2014 have been retired and replaced by SEPA Domestic cheques continue to be processed by the Irish Paper Clearing Company CLG 7 Historically the Irish banking system shared the sort code structure used in the UK but operated as a separate system since the Irish pound broke the link with sterling in March 1979 Codes are issued by the Banking and Payments Federation Ireland BPFI 8 which replaced IPSO in 2014 9 The full list of sort codes used in Ireland is as follows Note A large number of lower volume users and smaller banks share the 99 XX XX code and there are at least three users of the 93 XX XX codes assigned primarily to AIB Range Bank Note90 Bank of Ireland92 Central Bank of Ireland93 AIB Bank 93 09 03 for JP Morgan Bank Ireland plc93 90 21 for EBS d a c 95 Danske Bank Ireland trading as Danske Bank98 nb 1 Ulster Bank Ireland dac99 06 to 99 07 Permanent TSBRange Bank Note99 99 is used by a large number of financial institutions particularly those with smaller branch networks or a single branch 99 00 51 to 99 00 52 Citibank Europe plc99 00 61 to 99 00 62 Bank of America Realex Financial Services99 02 04 The Royal Bank of Scotland99 02 06 BNP Paribas Ireland99 02 12 Barclays Bank Ireland99 02 31 HSBC Bank99 02 40 ING Bank99 02 60 Rabobank International99 02 70 KBC Bank Ireland99 03 01 An Post99 03 20 for Aareal Bank99 03 25 for CACEIS Bank99 03 60 for Revolut Bank UAB99 04 Bank of Scotland99 10 BNP Paribas Ireland for Irish Credit Unions99 11 99 Fire Financial Services99 21 to 99 22 Irish Credit Unions99 99 01 Central Bank of Ireland for the Paymaster General of Ireland Irish Bank Resolution Corporation IBRC Irish bank account numbers are now presented in the IBAN format as follows IE97 BANK 9799 9912 3456 78This corresponds to the fictitious sort code 97 99 99 and account 12345678 prefixed by ISO Country code IE IBAN check digits 97 and Bank Identifier BANKCodes in the 70 range walks EditNumbers starting with a 7 after the 1960s 70 were reserved for the large number of London offices of banks which were not members of the London Clearing Individual sort codes were allocated on a one off basis to the many London offices of private and foreign banks Cheques drawn on these banks were colloquially known within the banking industry as walks because they were cleared by being hand delivered walked to the drawee banks by messengers from the Clearing House 10 By the 1990s most of these banks had been issued with sort codes within the ranges of the various clearing banks which from then on acted as clearing agents for them the practice of walking cheques was ended For cheques drawn on banks that had not made such an arrangement the cheques were posted to the drawee bank who would settle them by a cheque drawn on a clearing bank 10 International clearance EditWithin the Eurozone only IBAN numbers are required Transfers to and from the United Kingdom the United States and Australia and any other countries outside the Eurozone continue to use international networks and require a combination of IBAN or a domestic account and sorting routing code alongside a BIC code to identify the institution sending and receiving payments Characters 9 to 14 of British and Irish IBANs hold the bank account sort code 11 In some countries there is no direct equivalent of sort codes as the bank and branch codes are maintained separately from each other in those countries 11 Other countries however have or had codes which are equivalent to sort codes but with formats unique to the country concerned Examples include Germany Austria Bankleitzahl BLZ superseded by and incorporated into the IBAN as part of SEPA standardization Switzerland Bankenclearing Nummer BC Nummer Australia Bank State Branch BSB Canada Transit Code Sweden Clearingnummer Ukraine MFO India IFSC Indian Financial System Code The codes listed above for Germany Austria Switzerland and Sweden are incorporated into the IBANs for those countries See also EditBanks of the United Kingdom Industry Sorting Code Directory Bank state branch Bank Identifier Code International Bank Account NumberSources EditUK Clearings Directory 2005 p 297 The Association for Payment Clearing ServicesReferences Edit Sort Code Information for Republic of Ireland Irish Payment Services Organisation Ltd Retrieved 25 January 2010 Martins Bank www martinsbank co uk Six Digit NAICS Codes amp Titles NAICS Association Retrieved 12 September 2023 a b c Clearing Code Rules PDF UK Sort Codes Information February 2020 Topham Gwyn 17 July 2016 Bank of England to close personal banking service for employees The Guardian Retrieved 8 November 2016 Belfast Bankers Clearing Company Cheque and Credit Clearing Company Banking amp Payment Federation Ireland About us Payments www bpfi ie July 2018 Sort Code database BPFI Retrieved 1 January 2020 About BPFI Banking and Payments Federation Ireland Retrieved 1 January 2020 a b Capie Forrest Webber Alan 1985 A Monetary History of the United Kingdom 1870 1982 Routledge pp 289 290 ISBN 04 15381150 a b IBAN registry This registry provides detailed information about all ISO 13616 compliant national IBAN formats Release 31 November 2011 PDF SWIFT Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2011 a b c Being phased outExternal links EditClearing Codes Rules the rules for sorting codes managed by Bacs Faster Payments sort code checker shows which payment systems are supported for a given UK sort code Identify a bank from the sort code display bank branch and contact information Find branch clearing information and SWIFT BIC from a sort code shows branch details clearing information and equivalent SWIFT BIC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sort code amp oldid 1177251992, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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