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Although all claims for the refund of bank charges have been suspended, the FSA has agreed with the banks that where their customers are in financial hardship, that their refund applications may be looked at sympathetically instead of merely being suspended along with all the other refund claims.

 This sounds very good on paper.  However in practice we are finding that most people who apply for charges refunds because of hardship are refused.  We conclude that by and large hardship applications are unlikely to be successful.

 There seems to be no pattern or formula for qualifying for a hardship refund.  Many of our Users have been refused even though they are in serious circumstances or are even on benefits for themselves and for their children.

 

 On the other hand we have even come across a few applicants who have succeeded in obtaining a partial refund even though they were not on benefits and in fact were in employment.

This is highly unsatisfactory.  The FSA has set out no guidelines either to consumers or to the banks as to the circumstances in which an applicant qualifies for a hardship refund.

The sums which are refunded are generally never the full amount owed by the bank in charges and we have even come across some instances where banks have actually told their customers what they are to spend their refunds on!!!

The banks will always require a hardship applicant to complete a highly intrusive income and expenditure questionnaire.  We have no idea to what other uses this information may be put or whether it shared with other third parties.  We expect that it could be shared.

 Don't forget that the bank charges are your own money.

 By all means go ahead and ask for a charges-refund based upon hardship.  However, don't bank on it.  The process seems to be arbitrary and the banks give no explanations for refusal.

 There is no appeal to the court or to the Ombudsman.

 Here is a link to the main hardship application template:-

Hardship application

 

Please have a look through our library for many other helpful materials. 

In particular if you are on benefits and your bank is still taking your money in charges then the letter which asserts your right not to have your benefits used in this way may be very useful to you:-   Prevent your bank from taking your benefits (letter of appropriation)

 For our useful guides and templates generally please go to:- Guides and templates

 

And of course, if you have any questions or you need some free help, go to The Consumer Action Group forum

 

 

 

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Comments (4)Add Comment
Jo-anne
...
written by Jo-anne, September 13, 2009
I won my case against HSBC where their charges were causing financial hardship.
The bank seemed to be practising a bit of a money earning racket. I.e. a bank charge took me overdrawn. HSBC kept apply interest and charges til they were taking around one third of my salary.
Financial hardship over-rides the national issue of bank charges in the High Court.
I also instructed the accoutn be frozen and moved my salary BACS payment to another High Street bank. HSBC still tried to tak SOs and DDs from the accoutn and kept adding charges until these amounted to more than £2000 and kept pestering me as to how I intended settling the overdraft.smilies/wink.gif
workingmumof3
...
written by workingmumof3, October 16, 2009
I believe that the banks are only obliged to consider the actual period for which an individual is claiming harship rather than going back a full 6 years. In deciding if you are in a genuine hardship situation, the bank will review your account to see what you have been spending your money on, i.e. if you make regular payments to on-line gambling sites or have purchased expensive holidays etc the banks will typically not consider you a hardship case. It seems that lots of bank customers believe that by saying they are suffering hardship, the bank are obliged to refund your charges, sadly this is not the case at all.
h1tm4n32
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written by h1tm4n32, October 22, 2009
Hi, i came across something like this on here before, so with the bank kaap taking charges and putting me more and more behind on payments with my bills, i decided to try and claim my money back with the hardship letter, they then sent me a letter asking me to tell them ab out what i have going out and what i have coming in, a week or 2 later they have put the money back into my account, they had gone back 6 months on my 1st claim and 3 months on the second not sure about this 1 have got going with them, this is a 1/4 of my wage each month,
h1tm4n32
...
written by h1tm4n32, December 05, 2009
Hi it's me again, just to let people know how i done with the bank charges, well i was gob smacked when i looked at my account 1 night to find a large amount of money had been put into my account, i got back over £1,300 in charges, the bank wrote to me and it came after i had the money in my bank, they told me that they had looked at my credit and could see i was struggling with my creditors, this is why they have give me all the charges back, so thank you to the bank charges hardship i got some of my bills out the way and has help me out a bit. go for it and try you never know un-less you try good luck all



http://www.baby-information.co.uk

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