19 Mar 2026

Nationwide becomes first major banking provider to publish disabled access guides and urges all businesses to follow suit

  • Nationwide partners with AccessAble to publish detailed access guides for every branch
  • Guides explain and visualise information, from step-free access and communication support to domestic abuse safe spaces
  • Spending power of disabled households (the Purple Pound) worth c£446bn1, which could help struggling high streets
  • Nationwide and leading disabled access organisations urge businesses to publish access information online

Nationwide has become the first major UK banking provider to publish detailed access guides for all 605 of its branches - and is calling on all British businesses to follow suit. The move forms part of the Society’s commitment to financial inclusion and is intended to provide greater support for disabled households.

Produced with accessibility experts AccessAble and linked from Nationwide’s branch finder, the guides include features such-as step-free access, hearing loops, lowered counters, and British Sign Language (BSL) interpreters.  Over 500 Nationwide branch guides are now live and all 605 will be complete by end of May 2026. Virgin Money guides will follow by the end of the year for all of its 91 branches.

The launch comes as several major high‑street banks continue large‑scale branch closure programmes. By contrast, Nationwide has promised to keep all 605 branches open until at least 2030 and sees everyday how essential they remain.

The collective spending power of disabled households – known as the Purple Pound – stands at £446 billion a year, yet many businesses are still failing to address disabled consumer needs. Recent insights shared with Nationwide by the Research Institute for Disabled Consumers (RIDC)2 found that 82 per cent of disabled people cite missing accessibility details as the biggest barrier to assessing accessibility and 79 per cent said they struggled to judge the accessibility of a service in advance.

At a time when shop numbers are still falling sharply, with 37 closures a day in 20243, the Purple Pound represents a significant opportunity to help welcome disabled customers. According to new data from Euan’s Guide, the disabled access charity4, 70 per cent of disabled visitors return to venues that get accessibility right, and two thirds (66%) recommend them to others.

Nationwide welcomes accessibility being specifically called out in the government’s recent Financial Inclusion Strategy, which aims to ensure people can access, understand and use essential financial services. However, it would like to see a greater focus across all consumer-facing industries.

Following giving evidence to the Treasury Select Committee on the Strategy, Nationwide’s Director of Retail, Stephen Noakes, said: “The Committee is right to scrutinise how the financial services industry promotes and supports financial inclusion, but other sectors have a role to play too.

“At Nationwide, we are continuously working to create accessible and inclusive experiences, so everyone has the ability to do their banking with ease and in the way that they choose. While there is no single solution to accessibility, ensuring people can easily find out whether they can enter your premises is about as straightforward as it gets. Start with sharing the facts.”

Nationwide is joined by leading disabled organisations RIDC, AccessAble and Euan’s Guide in calling for businesses across the UK to publish accessibility information online.  The best thing is - publishing detailed access information is something all businesses can do, regardless of size or budget.

Dr Gregory Burke, Founder and Executive Chair, AccessAble, said: “Clear, detailed accessibility information should be regarded as a basic consumer right, giving disabled people the confidence to plan and supporting dignity and independence - an approach we have developed over 25 years in collaboration with more than 1,500 groups of disabled people. Nationwide’s commitment to publish our Detailed Access Guides for every branch is a significant step forward. The important next step for businesses is to ensure, as Nationwide have done, that accessibility information is also accurate, consistent and trustworthy.”

Antonia Lee-Bapty, CEO, Euan’s Guide, said: “Our annual Access Survey consistently shows that a lack of clear access information is one of the biggest barriers for disabled people - not just as customers, but as employees too. We support Nationwide’s call to action for all businesses to publish their accessibility information online – this is about inclusion at its most basic level but there is also a commercial opportunity.”