Virgin Money became part of Nationwide this spring in a £2.9bn deal. Photograph: Michael Kemp/AlamyVirgin Money became part of Nationwide this spring in a £2.9bn deal. Photograph: Michael Kemp/AlamyNationwide to cut 600 jobs in first redundancies after takeover of Virgin MoneyExclusive: Move affects staff of both companies whose roles will be duplicated once operations are merged
Nationwide building society is axing 600 jobs in the first major round of cuts linked to its controversial takeover of the high street bank Virgin Money.
The move affects both Nationwide and Virgin Money staff, whose roles are due to be duplicated once the lenders’ operations are fully merged.
Virgin Money formally became a part of Nationwide this spring after a £2.9bn takeover. The building society has remained tight-lipped about the potential impact for workers since the deal was first announced in 2024.
The cuts are understood to be aimed at back-office staff, rather than customer-facing jobs, which include staff working at the near 700 branches that the bank has pledged to keep open until at least 2030.
The building society, which employs about 25,000 staff, is now in the process of a weeks-long consultation over the job cuts involving the Nationwide Group staff union and Unite, which represents Virgin Money bank staff.
The group, which is headquartered at a sprawling campus in Swindon, revealed the plans to colleagues last week.
Nationwide said it “is now the UK’s fastest-growing banking provider, continuing to attract more customers and expand into new areas such as business banking.
“As we integrate Virgin Money, we are making some modest changes in areas where activities overlap. However, we’re committed to retaining the talent and skills of our colleagues wherever we can.”
The building society is understood to be recruiting for about 270 roles, though none are specifically reserved for staff affected by job cuts.
The takeover of Virgin Money was a boon for the building society sector when it was first announced two years ago, marking a rare moment where a member-owned lender – traditionally focused on mortgages and savings – was snapping up a commercial high street bank.
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‘It feels unfair’: the Britons struggling to get a mortgage since Iran war beganRead moreHowever, the move also proved controversial, with Nationwide having refused to give members a vote on the deal.
Nationwide subsequently used the takeover, and the resulting expansion of its operations, to justify a 43% hike to its chiefexecutive Debbie Crosbie’s maximum pay package last year, allowing her to earn up to £7m if all criteria were met. Members were not given a binding vote on Crosbie’s pay rise at last year’s annual general meeting.
The lender’s annual report, released earlier this month, showed Crosbie was handed £3.2m in bonuses – a combination of payouts for annual and longer-term performance – pushing her overall pay packet to £4.7m for the year to March 2026.
Nationwide embarked on a series of job cuts in the months leading up to the Virgin Money takeover, amounting to about 800 job losses by early 2024.
That included 200 staff whose redundancies were announced shortly before the Christmas holidays in 2023. That came shortly after Crosbie rescinded a “work anywhere” policy launched under her predecessor, Joe Garner, during the Covid pandemic.
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