Opening a business bank account feels like a routine admin task, but the choice you make in those first weeks can affect your daily cashflow, your access to credit and the fees you pay for years to come. UK businesses now have more options than at any point in living memory — from the major clearing banks to a wave of digital challengers — which makes comparison more important, not less.

What to Compare Before You Commit

The monthly account fee is the obvious starting point, but it rarely tells the full story. High-street banks typically charge between £6 and £12.50 per month, with free-banking introductory offers lasting 12 to 24 months before charges kick in. Challenger and digital banks such as Starling and Tide often advertise no monthly fee, but recoup costs through per-transaction charges or premium tiers.

Work out your expected transaction profile before comparing. A retail business depositing cash daily will face very different costs to a consultancy that moves money electronically a handful of times a month. Cash deposit fees — typically 50p to £1.50 per £100 — can quickly dwarf any monthly fee saving if your turnover involves physical notes and coins.

Beyond price, consider:

  • Integrations. Does the account connect to your accounting software — Xero, QuickBooks, FreeAgent — without manual exports?
  • Overdraft and credit facilities. What unsecured overdraft is on offer, and at what rate?
  • Branch access. If you ever need to pay in cheques or large cash sums, a branch or Post Office tie-in matters.
  • Customer support. Challengers often offer chat only; high-street banks offer branches but variable wait times.

The best business bank account is not the cheapest one — it is the one whose cost structure fits how your business actually moves money.

The Lending Relationship: A Common Misconception

One of the most persistent myths in small business finance is that your bank account and your borrowing must come from the same place. They do not. Your day-to-day account is simply a transactional facility; your lending arrangements are a separate commercial relationship that you can place wherever terms are most favourable.

This matters because banks often cross-sell loans and overdrafts to existing account holders — sometimes at rates that are not the most competitive available. A business that shops around for finance independently is under no obligation to move its account. Specialist lenders assess applications on the strength of the business, not on whether you bank with them.

If you are looking at growth finance, a working capital loan or invoice funding, it is worth exploring what specialist providers offer before defaulting to your bank's product sheet. Credicorp offers business lending assessed on trading performance rather than account history, meaning you can apply without disrupting your existing banking arrangements. Similarly, Credicorp's business finance options are available whether you bank with a high-street name or a digital challenger.

For broader context on how different financing options compare, see our guide on funding options for small businesses and our overview of managing business cashflow.

When to Review and Switch

Most businesses open an account and leave it untouched for years. That inertia is expensive. Free-banking periods end quietly; fee structures change; better products arrive. Set a calendar reminder to review your business account every 12 months, or whenever your transaction volumes change significantly.

Switching a UK business account has become considerably easier since the introduction of the Current Account Switch Service for business accounts. Payments and direct debits redirect automatically, and the process typically completes within seven working days.

Choosing the right account is about matching cost structure to how you actually operate, keeping your lending options open and revisiting the decision as your business grows. Those three habits — compare properly, borrow independently, review annually — will serve most UK businesses better than loyalty to any single institution.