NS&I to begin contacting estates affected by missing account scandal, but delays persist

Sarah Coles
19 May 2026
  • Government-backed savings provider NS&I will contact estates affected by historic bereavement mistakes from next week, after it had failed to find every account when asked to search after customers died (source: NS&I bereavement claims – update | NS&I)
  • Up to 34,000 estates will have around £367 million of overlooked NS&I money returned with interest
  • The money will either include the interest built up since the error occurred or interest paid at the Bank of England base rate plus 1%
  • Any income tax due on the interest or inheritance tax due on the payouts will be waived
  • However, serious delays in the process will continue until the autumn

Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at AJ Bell, comments:

“NS&I is hoping to bring down the curtain on its now notorious bereavement drama by reuniting the estates of deceased customers with the money it failed to track down – with interest added on top. The government has also agreed to waive any inheritance tax that would have been due on the money, or any income tax on the interest.

“Unfortunately, for anyone trying to process the estate of a loved one who had NS&I holdings, the administrative burden continues. Instead of taking its standard two weeks to respond, NS&I is currently taking eight, with the service not expected to go back to normal until the autumn.

“Anyone who has had to deal with an estate is no stranger to delays. Executors have to stick to strict deadlines, and for estates where inheritance tax is due, money has to be handed over within six months of the end of the month in which the person died. It means any delays in the process can be expensive as well as frustrating. The extra six weeks’ wait from NS&I will come as yet another headache for anyone slogging through the process.”

Sarah Coles
Head of Personal Finance

Sarah Coles is head of personal finance. She’s passionate about helping people get to grips with their money, so they have more freedom to do the things that really matter to them in life. She regularly provides insight and analysis for the press, writes columns and articles and appears on TV and radio. She covers everything from savings and investments to pensions and tax. Sarah is an award winning former financial journalist, spending almost 20 years working for publications from Bloomberg to Moneywise and AOL Money. She has worked as a financial spokesperson for the past nine years, and most recently won Headline Money’s Expert of the Year award.

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