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How to Open a Business Bank Account in the UK as a Non-Resident

UK business banking is one of the most difficult in the world for non-residents. High-street banks routinely refuse foreign-owned companies. This guide explains your best options, what documents yo...

March 2026 4 min read
How to Open a Business Bank Account in the UK as a Non-Resident

Target keyword: business bank account UK non-resident Category: Banking Deep-Dives TLDR: UK business banking is one of the most difficult in the world for non-residents. High-street banks routinely refuse foreign-owned companies. This guide explains your best options, what documents you need, and how fintech has changed the game.

The UK Business Banking Problem

Here's the frustrating truth: having a UK limited company is straightforward. Opening a business bank account for that company is not.

Major UK banks — Barclays, Lloyds, NatWest, HSBC UK — technically accept foreign-owned companies but in practice reject the vast majority. Their compliance teams treat non-resident owners as high-risk by default. Many people set up a UK Ltd and then discover they can't get a bank account.

The situation has improved significantly thanks to fintechs. But traditional banking remains difficult.

Why UK Banks Reject Non-Residents

UK banks are regulated by the FCA and subject to HMRC oversight. Post-2016 anti-money laundering rules tightened dramatically. Banks now face enormous fines for onboarding clients with unclear funds or high-risk profiles.

  • Red flags that trigger rejection:
  • Director / shareholder living outside the UK
  • No UK address (other than registered office)
  • Business activities in high-risk jurisdictions
  • Newly incorporated company with no trading history
  • Inability to attend a branch in person
  • Source of capital cannot be documented

Your Options in 2026

Traditional High-Street Banks (Difficult) | Bank | Non-Resident Stance | Notes | |---|---|---| | HSBC UK | Possible if existing HSBC global relationship | Must apply via International Business Banking | | Barclays | Very difficult | Usually requires UK address and director presence | | NatWest / RBS | Rarely approved | Strong preference for UK-resident directors | | Lloyds / Halifax | Rare | Branch visit required, UK nexus helps | | Starling Bank | No — UK residents only | |

Fintech / EMI Options (Most Accessible) | Provider | Type | Multi-Currency | Notes | |---|---|---|---| | Wise Business | EMI | Yes (40+ currencies) | Best for international payments | | Revolut Business | EMI | Yes | Full banking features, easy onboarding | | Airwallex | EMI | Yes | Excellent for e-commerce | | Tide | EMI | GBP only | UK-focused, easier approval | | Monzo Business | E-Money | GBP | UK residents preferred | | Payoneer | Payment account | Yes | Good for freelancers | | Cashplus | Prepaid + business | GBP | Good fallback |

Challenger Banks - **Anna Money** — UK business accounts, relatively easy for foreign-owned companies - **Countingup** — accounting-integrated, accepts non-residents in some cases - **Coconut** — self-employed / sole traders

What Documents You'll Need

  • Company documents:
  • Certificate of incorporation
  • Memorandum and articles of association
  • Share register
  • Registered office address confirmation
  • Confirmation of company activity (Companies House)
  • Director / shareholder documents:
  • Passport (certified if applying remotely)
  • Proof of address (utility bill, bank statement — dated within 3 months)
  • Business plan / trading description
  • Source of funds declaration
  • Personal bank statements (3–6 months)
  • Business evidence:
  • Website
  • Client contracts or letters of intent
  • Invoice examples
  • Description of services / products

Wise Business — The De Facto Standard

For most non-resident UK Ltd owners, Wise Business is the go-to starting point:

  • Onboarding: Fully remote, typically 2–7 days
  • GBP account: Yes, with sort code and account number
  • Multi-currency: Hold and convert 40+ currencies
  • Debit card: Wise Business Mastercard
  • Cost: £45 one-time setup fee
  • FX rates: Mid-market (excellent)
  • Limitations: Not a bank — no FSCS protection, cannot receive CHAPS payments, no credit

For most e-commerce, consulting, and digital businesses, Wise + a UK Ltd covers 90% of needs.

Revolut Business

  • Revolut has grown into a full-featured alternative:
  • UK IBAN + sort code
  • Up to 25 sub-accounts in different currencies
  • Physical and virtual cards
  • Integrates with accounting software
  • Plans from £0/month (basic) to £79/month (premium)

Non-resident companies are accepted but compliance review can take 1–4 weeks.

Getting a Traditional UK Bank Account as a Non-Resident

If you need a traditional account (for large GBP transactions, CHAPS, credit facilities):

1. Build trading history first — 6–12 months of transactions through Wise/Revolut 2. Get a UK accountant — some banks accept introductions from accountants 3. Set up a proper UK presence — a co-working desk, not just a registered office 4. Apply to Metro Bank — more open to foreign-owned companies than high-street peers 5. Try Starling's "Sole Trader" route if you're a sole trader (UK residents only) 6. Consider HSBC International — if you bank with HSBC in your home country, use that relationship

Timeline

Account TypeExpected Wait
Wise Business1–7 days
Revolut Business3–14 days
Airwallex3–7 days
Tide / Anna5–10 days
Metro Bank2–4 weeks
HSBC International4–8 weeks
Barclays / Lloyds / NatWest6–12 weeks (if accepted)

After Opening — Compliance Stays Active

  • UK banks and fintechs conduct ongoing KYC reviews. Expect:
  • Annual request for updated documents
  • Questions about large or unusual transactions
  • Possible account review if you add a new jurisdiction or product line

Keep your business records clean, respond promptly to any compliance requests, and don't ignore messages from your bank.

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This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. Data last verified March 2026.