How to access cash from Child Trust Fund after emigrating

How to access cash from Child Trust Fund after emigrating

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M005

Original Poster:

199 posts

231 months

Thursday 10th October
quotequote all
Wondering if the collective wisdom can think of a solution to this or if anyone has had a similar experience?

TLDR: Issues getting funds out of UK to Australia with no UK Bank account & can't cash GBP cheques in Australia.

We emigrated in 2015 from the UK to Australia, children were 9 & 5 at the time, both have / had Child Trust Funds with Nationwide. We updated all contact details at the time of emigrating and have been receiving annual statements to our AUS Address ever since.

The eldest is now 18 and has been sent a letter saying the CTF has matured and he needs to either open an account with Nationwide to invest / save or withdraw the money.

Nationwide have provided the following options:
1. Open a Nationwide account to invest / save the money - must go into a Nationwide branch to open the account.
2. 'Use" the money by way of transferring it to a Nationwide Current Account - must go into a Nationwide branch to open.
3. 'Use' the money by way of transferring it to a non Nationwide account - Nationwide issue a GBP cheque and post it out.

1 & 2 - there are no Nationwide branches in Australia and even if we were visiting the UK anytime soon, he couldn't open an account as he isn't a UK resident (born in the UK & has dual nationality / passports).

3 - He doesn't have a UK Bank account, as per 1 & 2 can't open one as not as he's not a UK resident. Additionally no Australian banks will accept a foreign currency cheque, indeed the banking system here has been largely electronic since before we arrived and no one uses cheques.

I have a UK bank account, but obviously not a lot of help.

Nationwide say these are the only options and aren't willing to provide any other solution.

Racking my brains for options, but a little short on ideas given Nationwide's stance.

Thanks

supersport

4,221 posts

233 months

Do any of the services like Wise accept cheques?

To all intent and purposes this would look like a UK BANK TO nationwide.

Mr Overheads

2,482 posts

182 months

Seems like an interesting case for The Sunday Times Question of Money column.

alscar

5,180 posts

219 months

Doesn't sound particularly helpful from Nationwide.
Seeing as they have given the options of either a cheque to be posted out and /or you have a UK bank account you would think it shouldn't be much of a leap for them to transfer it to you first in the UK or indeed issue a Aus $ cheque and send to your son.
I doubt this is one off situation for them either.
I think my first step if you getting no joy from actually speaking to someone is to contact their complaints dept and put the problem to them.
Depending on that result consider an email to their CEO and explain in both cases politely what the issue is.


Michael_B

653 posts

106 months

We had similar issues with our son (left Britain at age 7, never had a UK account), and indeed ourselves when those thundercnts at Barclays unilaterally closed our account of 35 years standing last summer. Revolut is your friend, but that does suppose that the bank/BS is willing to make an electronic transfer.

My son had £400 worth of NS&I children's bonds, which after many phone calls and letters, they finally agreed to transfer to his Revolut GBP account. This was handled so badly, that the only way to hurry it up was to make a complaint. This was upheld and he was awarded £75 in compensation. We repeatedly stated that this should be transferred to the same Revolut account, but they insisted that this wasn't possible.

Three weeks later a cheque arrived in his name (I have a sterling account here with UBS, but they didn't want to know due the name discrepancy), and it is still pinned to our noticeboard at home some six months later.

ecs

1,286 posts

176 months

Wonder if you could pay the cheque into HSBC Expat? https://www.expat.hsbc.com/

boyse7en

7,052 posts

171 months

Can you not get the Nationwide send you the cheque and pay it into your UK bank account via the account's app?
I occasionally get sent cheques and pay them in by taking a photo in my app.

ferret50

1,486 posts

15 months

Would Nationwide do an international transfer to an Aussie account?

Hol

8,600 posts

206 months

Any grandparents, or other relatives with the same surname who could open a joint bank account with the recipient?

Payments in are allowed in either name.

M005

Original Poster:

199 posts

231 months

Thanks All, in response to the comments / questions in no particular order:

Nationwide will only issue a cheque in GBP, not AUD and won't do an electronic transfer, not even to another UK Account (welcome back to the 1980's)

We've looked at HSBC Expat, but you need high, regular income. My accounts are with HSBC (UK & Aus) and I have a HSBC Global account, so we're looking into whether we can get my Son a similar HSBC Aus / Global set up and pay the cheque in that way.

I could pay the cheque into HSBC via the app, but the accounts are in my name and the cheque would be in his. Also the app has a value limit on the cheque, so Nationwide will need to break it down and issue 4 cheques, which will no doubt be too much trouble.

40 minutes on the phone to their UK Call Centre, yielded nothing, also aparently no managers on duty to speak to in an attempt to get further than hearing the same limited script over and over again. Pushing for an escalation resulted in a generic email thanking us for our feedback which would be taken into consideration for possible future process improvements banghead

I'll be escalating and raising a formal complaint this weekend.

ferret50

1,486 posts

15 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Suprised Nationwide are being so unhelpful, earlier this year I transfered a six figure euro sum to them at the holding bank's daily transfer limit with absolutely no issues or questions.

If you can trace their CEO a well worded email is worth a try.

ATG

21,180 posts

278 months

Saturday
quotequote all
It's been so long since I've used cheques that i can't really remember the rules, but can't the payee "endorse" the cheque (i.e. scrawl someone else's name on it)? I.e. get them to post the cheque to your son. Her endorses it to you. You post it back to the uk so it can be paid into your account.

PM3

869 posts

66 months

Saturday
quotequote all
ATG said:
It's been so long since I've used cheques that i can't really remember the rules, but can't the payee "endorse" the cheque (i.e. scrawl someone else's name on it)? I.e. get them to post the cheque to your son. Her endorses it to you. You post it back to the uk so it can be paid into your account.
but not if " crossed " (Last 2 times I got a stupid cheque from an institution they were crossed ) which is presumably to prevent exactly this

alscar

5,180 posts

219 months

PM3 said:
Hopefully OP won’t need to resort to this which he can only do anyway after exhausting the complaints procedure from NW.