If you’ve seen headlines about NS&I and “missing” savings, it’s worth understanding what’s actually gone wrong and what it means for you.
What’s happened
NS&I has admitted that, in some bereavement cases going back years, it didn’t identify all the accounts a customer held after they died. When someone passes away, providers are supposed to locate every account in that person’s name and pay it out to their estate. In this case, that tracing process didn’t always work properly.
Here’s the scale of it:
- Around 37,000 estates affected
- Roughly £476 million not initially paid out
- Issues dating back to 2008
The issue affected a range of NS&I products, including:
- Premium Bonds (including unclaimed prizes)
- Direct Saver accounts
- Income Bonds
- Other NS&I savings and investment products held across multiple accounts
The problem came down to how accounts were matched. If someone had multiple products, or their details weren’t perfectly aligned across systems, not all of their accounts were linked together. That meant some savings weren’t picked up during bereavement checks.
So in some cases, families were told they had received everything, when they hadn’t. NS&I is now reviewing records, contacting affected customers, and returning what’s owed.
What this doesn’t mean
It’s important to be clear:
- No money has disappeared
- NS&I savings are still 100% backed by the UK government
- This wasn’t about fraud or security
The issue is administrative. The money was there, but it wasn’t always identified at the time it should have been.
Do you need to move your money?
For most people, there’s no need to move your money. Your savings remain protected by the government guarantee, and NS&I says the issue has now been fixed for current cases. But this should prompt a different question: would someone else be able to find all your accounts? That’s where problems are more likely to arise.
Why this isn’t just an NS&I issue
Most people don’t keep all their money in one place.
Over time, you might build up:
- multiple savings accounts
- ISAs with different providers
- Premium Bonds
- older or unused accounts
- app-based or digital banks
There’s no central system that pulls all of this together.
So when someone else has to step in, they’re trying to piece things together from scratch.
If you think you, or a relative, might already have lost track of an account, NS&I does offer a tracing service to help reunite people with forgotten savings: Track down lost NS&I savings
What can go wrong
If your finances aren’t clearly organised, or clearly communicated, your family could face:
- accounts being overlooked
- delays in settling your estate
- extra admin contacting providers
- uncertainty about whether everything’s been found
That’s exactly what this situation highlights, even when money is safe, it isn’t always easy to trace.
What you should do now
You don’t need to move your money, but you should make it easier to find and understand.
Start with:
- Listing all your accounts
Include savings, current accounts, NS&I products, ISAs and pensions—anything that holds money. - Creating a simple financial folder
A single place with key information can make a big difference, often called an “end of life book”, as recommended by organisations like Age UK. This can help to bring together your personal details, birth certificates, accounts, insurance documents, funeral requests and key contacts. - Making that information accessible
Keep it secure, but make sure someone you trust knows it exists and where to find it. - Talking to someone you trust
Let them know what you have and how to get started if they ever need to step in. - Reviewing your will
Make sure it reflects your current finances and supports your executor. You can use services like Which? to help put this in place. - Simplifying where possible
Closing unused or duplicate accounts reduces the chances of anything being overlooked.
The real risk isn’t losing money, it’s losing track of it
This isn’t about where your money is. It’s about whether anyone else could find it and know what to do next. The real risk isn’t losing money, but leaving behind a situation no one fully understands.
This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal or financial advice.
