Best joint bank accounts 2024

We reveal the joint bank account providers most highly rated by their customers, to help couples and friends manage money. 
Chiara CavaglieriSenior researcher & writer
Which? reveals the best joint bank accounts

What is a joint bank account?

Joint bank accounts aren't just for couples – friends, housemates and business partners might also want to share an account to make managing finances easier.

What's crucial is that these accounts are easy to access, with great customer service and account perks.

Here we reveal the best joint bank account providers and explain how to deal with common issues around earning interest, debt and mental incapacity. 

If you're looking for our full bank account reviews, see our guide to the best banks.

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Best joint bank accounts

All of the banks and building societies in the table below let you set up a joint account as either-to-sign (where any account holder can authorise transactions).

We've also shown you those that permit both-to-sign joint accounts (where all account holders must authorise transactions).

Accounts are listed alphabetically but you can sort by other columns by clicking the three horizontal lines icons.

RECOMMENDED PROVIDER
Starling Bank
83%2NoNo
RECOMMENDED PROVIDER
First Direct
82%2YesNo
eco buy
Nationwide Building Society
78%2YesNo
Dankse Bank
76%2NoNo
Barclays
74%2YesYes
Halifax
74%2YesNo
eco buy
The Co-operative Bank
73%3YesNo

Table note: Data correct as of October 2023. Triodos Bank is also an Eco Provider that offers joint bank accounts, but isn't on this table because it didn't receive the minimum number of respondents for a customer score. Customer score: Our rating for customer satisfaction, based on feedback from real customers. The score is made up of a customer's overall satisfaction with the brand, and how likely they are to recommend that brand to a friend. We surveyed 4,550 members of the general public in August 2023. Our full table includes scores and star ratings for all banks.

Joint bank account provider reviews

Starling and First Direct are the only Which? Recommended Providers for current accounts and both banks earned five stars for customer service and complaints handling following our most recent survey. 

A joint Starling account

You can only apply for a joint Starling account once both parties have opened a personal account first. This can be done in minutes by downloading the Starling app from the official Google Play store or Apple Store. 

Once you both have an account, you can request a new joint account directly from your Starling app and follow the instructions. 

Starling pays 3.25% AER (variable) interest on balances up to £5,000 and is fee-free for foreign withdrawals and debit card purchases.  

Its five-star rated app has various useful features such as Saving Spaces (to track your savings goals), spending insights and analytics, and a Bills Manager. If you're a parent, you can apply for a Kite debit card for your child and manage this from your joint account. 

A joint First Direct account

The First Direct 1st Account can be opened online as a joint account by UK residents aged 18+  in around 10 minutes. 

It's an account with lots of perks: a £250 interest-free overdraft (though it charges a whopping 39.9% EAR thereafter); no fees for foreign debit card purchases and cash withdrawals; and access to a Regular Saver paying 7% on monthly deposits of between £25 and £300, fixed for 12 months.  

First Direct regularly offers a generous switching incentive (at the time of writing, it paid a £175 welcome bonus if you used the Current Account Switching Service and paid in at least £1,000 within three months) but the offer is limited to one payment per account or joint account. 

You can pay in cash and cheques at branches of parent bank HSBC. If you have accounts with both brands, keep your total deposits below £85,000 so that your money is fully covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme.

Watch: why should you get a joint bank account?

Can a joint bank account affect your credit rating?

Yes, joint accounts create a financial link between you and any other account holders – known as 'financial associates' – meaning prospective lenders may look at their credit report as well as yours when assessing applications.

If you share a bank account with someone who has a poor credit history, it could make it more difficult for you to get credit, even in your own name.

Warning

Joint bank accounts and debt

No matter who pays in and who spends what, each account holder is jointly responsible for any debt.

If you've agreed to an either-to-sign joint account, any account holder can increase or decrease an overdraft without the permission of the other(s).

The bank could pursue any account holder for an overdrawn balance, even if they were unaware of it.

Disputes and closing a joint bank account

What to do in a dispute

If there's a dispute, you must tell your bank immediately.

After being notified of a disagreement, providers will register the dispute and either freeze the account or switch it to 'both-to-sign' so that it no longer accepts instructions from just one account holder.

This means that debit cards and cheque books are blocked, and access to online or telephone banking is suspended until the dispute is resolved, or you both agree to close the account.

In some cases, direct debits and standing orders are automatically cancelled, so you may be advised to open a new sole account to cover essential bills.

What to do if you want to close an account

Some providers will let one person close a joint account, as long as there isn't a dispute registered. But otherwise, you'll both need to sign and send an account closure form or visit a branch together.

You won't be able to close an account until any overdraft has been paid off.

Your bank or building society will also need to know how the money will be distributed between you, and what should happen to any standing orders or direct debits.

Remember that details of all financial associations will remain on your credit report unless you tell the credit reference agencies otherwise.

Contact all three agencies – Equifax, Experian and TransUnion – to issue a 'notice of disassociation'. This means that the other account holder's financial circumstances won't affect your credit applications in future.

Joint bank accounts and 'mental incapacity'

Providers in England and Wales may freeze a joint account when one person loses mental capacity, unless a power of attorney is already in place to make decisions on their behalf.

This is designed to protect the vulnerable, but it can take several months and a lot of money for a deputy to be appointed by the Court of Protection.

This would involve temporarily blocking debit cards, withdrawals, online banking and even direct debits – only Clydesdale and Yorkshire Banks, Co-operative Bank, First Direct, Nationwide, Post Office, Santander, TSB and Virgin Money told Which? the account would remain in full service for the other account holders.

In Scotland, banks must automatically allow the other account holders to carry on using the account under the Incapacity Scotland Act 2000, provided it was set up on an either-to-sign basis.

In Northern Ireland, practices vary between banks.

Set up Power of Attorney with Which?

With Which? Wills, you can set up Power of Attorney and get support from our legal experts as you go through the application process.

Visit our Power of Attorney site and see how we can help you get the peace of mind you're looking for.

What happens to a joint bank account when someone dies?

When an account holder dies, money held in joint names usually passes automatically to the surviving account holder, which means that they are still able to access the funds, and probate is avoided.

Under Scottish law, a deceased's share doesn't pass automatically by survivorship to the remaining owner, but the bank may allow them to continue to operate it.

After receiving the death certificate, the bank can transfer the account into the surviving party's sole name, although any existing overdraft facilities may be reviewed.

The tax implications can be less straightforward:

  • If the account is held by spouses or civil partners, the money is usually exempt from inheritance tax (IHT);
  • For anyone else – such as unmarried partners or other relations – HMRC will want to know how much money was deposited and withdrawn by each owner, and any IHT due must be paid by the beneficiary.

For example, if a son or daughter operates a joint account on behalf of an elderly parent, and never contributed to the account, all of the money will be treated as part of the deceased's estate.

What you need to know when opening a joint bank account