Our Verdict on the Virgin Money Business Bank Account
Virgin Money gives new businesses the longest free banking runway on the UK high street. 25 months free, then £6.50/month with 0.35% debit-card cashback. No one else lets you trade for over two years without paying a fee.
We checked pricing against virginmoney.com in May 2026. Compare the free runway: Santander 18 months, Barclays 12, NatWest 12. Virgin Money clears them all by more than a year. That’s the deal.
The biggest change isn’t in the headline rates. On 2 April 2026, Virgin Money’s business book transferred to Nationwide Building Society. Your account is now legally under Nationwide (FRN 106078), PRA-authorised. Sort code, account number, app and phone line unchanged.
FSCS cover is £120,000 per eligible depositor per institution. Same statutory limit as every PRA-licensed bank in the UK. If you previously had Nationwide personal deposits, count the £120,000 across both, not separately.
The catch is the £6.50 fee. After 25 months, it kicks in. Cashback caps at £500/year, so a heavy card-spending business covers most of the fee, a light one doesn’t. We model the maths in the fees section below.
If you trade as a sole trader or LTD with turnover under £1 million, look at the M Account for Business too. Permanently free, 0.25% cashback, app-based. NatWest Mettle has been closed to new applications since 2023. M Account is the live door.
Key Pros and Cons
You get 25 months free banking, 0.35% cashback up to £500/year, free electronic payments, FSCS cover to £120,000 and a permanently free M Account option for smaller businesses. Free Faster Payments, BACS and direct debits are all in the bundle.
You don’t get FreeAgent. NatWest bundles it free, worth £14.50/month standalone. If your VAT and MTD workflow lives inside FreeAgent, the 25-month head start gets eaten by year three. That’s the trade.
Branch coverage is thin. Cash deposits route through the Post Office. If your week ends with a Friday afternoon cash drop, that’s a different routine from walking into a NatWest counter. Workable, not identical.
Trustpilot sits at 3.3/5 from 12,700+ reviews. Higher than NatWest (1.4) and Santander (1.5), well below Starling (4.1). The Business Moneyfacts Awards 2025 named Virgin Money Best Service from a Business Bank, an industry-judged counter to the mid-tier customer score.
- 25 months free banking for eligible new businesses, the longest free period of any UK high-street bank
- 0.35% cashback on debit-card spend, capped at £500/year (Business Current Account)
- M Account for Business is permanently free for sole traders and LTDs under £1m turnover, with 0.25% cashback
- FSCS-protected to £120,000 under Nationwide Building Society (FRN 106078) following the 2 April 2026 transfer
- Free electronic payments included: Faster Payments, BACS, direct debits, standing orders
- Business Moneyfacts Awards 2025: Best Service from a Business Bank
- £6.50/month after the 25-month free period ends (Business Current Account)
- No free FreeAgent bundle, NatWest includes it free, worth £14.50/month standalone
- Cashback capped at £500/year on the Business Current Account
- Limited branch network; cash deposits routed via Post Office (per-deposit charge applies)
- No multi-currency wallets, standard FX rate on overseas payments, not mid-market
- Trustpilot 3.3/5 (12,700+ reviews, May 2026), mid-tier, below digital challengers
Who Virgin Money Is Best For
Choose Virgin Money if you’re a new business that wants the longest possible free runway with cashback on top. Twenty-five months of zero monthly fees buys you time to build revenue before the £6.50/month switches on.
Picture a one-person consultancy invoicing four clients a month, sterling-only: over two years of free banking and a quiet 0.35% on every card swipe. Under £1m turnover and you’d rather never pay a fee? Weigh the permanently free M Account for Business first.
Skip Virgin Money if FreeAgent is your VAT-and-MTD tool. NatWest bundles it free. At £14.50/month standalone, NatWest’s 12-month free period plus £5/month plus free FreeAgent beats Virgin Money’s headline once you run the maths past month thirty.
Skip it too if you bank weekly cash takings of £3,000 or more and need a branch counter on your way home. Post Office routing works, but NatWest or Barclays put you in front of a teller. That’s a workflow choice, not a price one.
Virgin Money Account Eligibility and Application
Virgin Money takes the widest UK structure list of any high-street offer. Sole traders, LTDs, partnerships, LLPs, charities, clubs, societies.
If your setup normally falls foul of Barclays or NatWest’s main-account criteria, this is the door that’s more likely to open. We confirmed the list at virginmoney.com in May 2026, check before you start, as terms can shift through the Nationwide transition.
The legal entity matters more than usual right now.
Since 2 April 2026, your account sits under Nationwide Building Society (FRN 106078), PRA and FCA authorised. That’s a full building-society licence with FSCS cover, not e-money safeguarding.
If you’re moving from Tide or another fintech, that distinction is the one your accountant will care about when you next reconcile a quarterly VAT return.
Day-to-day banking runs exactly as it did before the transfer. Same sort codes, account numbers, app, support lines. Apply today and you open a Nationwide-backed account branded as Virgin Money.
Who Can Open a Virgin Money Account
The Business Current Account accepts sole traders, limited companies, partnerships, LLPs, charities, clubs and societies. That’s a broader entity list than Barclays or NatWest run on their main business product. If your structure is unusual, Virgin Money is more likely to take you.
The M Account for Business is narrower. Sole traders and limited companies only, with annual turnover under £1 million. App-only application. Partnerships, LLPs, charities and clubs don’t qualify, the main Business Current Account is your route.
Credit checks apply for both accounts and for any overdraft request. You need to be UK-based with a UK business address, aged 18 or over, and directors must have UK addresses for verification.
What You Need to Apply
Have photo ID, proof of address, Companies House number (for LTDs), and expected turnover details ready before you start. Most rejections we see at this stage come from missing paperwork mid-flow, not eligibility itself.
Application is online for the Business Current Account and in-app for the M Account. There’s no branch route in.
If you want to walk into a counter to open the account, NatWest and Barclays are the alternatives , Virgin Money sits closer to a digital-first onboarding than a traditional high-street one.
Need the account live by a fixed date? Next month’s payroll, a VAT quarter-end, a supplier payment with terms attached, build in a buffer. We’d budget seven to fourteen days for a standard sole-trader or LTD opening, longer if your structure is a partnership or charity needing manual review.
If you need an account live the same week, open a Starling or Tide first and migrate to Virgin Money once the 25-month clock is worth starting. The free period is generous enough that a short detour through a digital challenger doesn’t erase the value.
Virgin Money Account Fees and Pricing
Pricing is unusually clean here. £0/month for 25 months on the Business Current Account, then £6.50/month on the Standard Tariff. One product, no tiered plans, no add-on bundles. Confirmed at virginmoney.com in May 2026.
Inside the free period you get a UK current account, debit card, free electronic payments, and 0.35% cashback on debit-card spend (cap £500/year).
Faster Payments, BACS, direct debits and standing orders all included from day one, useful when your month-end routine is fifty supplier payments in one batch.
M Account for Business is the other route. Permanently free for sub-£1m turnover sole traders and LTDs, with 0.25% cashback. Two different value propositions in one provider. Pick the one your turnover and structure fit.
Monthly Fees and Plan Options
Twenty-five months at £0 is the headline.
After that, £6.50/month. Year three at full tariff costs you £78, against NatWest’s £60 or Barclays’ £102. Mid-pack on ongoing cost. The value lives in the long free runway up front, not in the tariff that kicks in once it ends.
At maximum cashback earn, £500/year covers 6.4 months of the £6.50 fee. The catch is the cap: 0.35% of £12,000 of annual card spend hits the ceiling, and additional spend earns you nothing.
A retail business pushing £40,000 a year through the card sees the same £500 as one pushing £12,000. Cashback is real, but capped earlier than the headline suggests.
M Account for Business has no monthly fee at any point. 0.25% cashback, confirm the cap at virginmoney.com before you build a forecast around it.
For a sole trader running £30,000 a year on the card, that’s £75 back with zero monthly fee to offset against it.
| Account | Monthly fee | Free period | Cashback |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virgin Money business current account | £6.50 | 25 months | 0.35% (cap £500/yr) |
| Virgin Money M Account | Free | Permanent | 0.25% |
| NatWest Business | £5 | 12 months | None |
| Barclays Business | £8.50 | 12 months | None |
| Santander Business | £12.50 | 18 months | 1–3% |
| Starling Business | Free | Permanent | None |
Transaction Fees and Charges
Faster Payments, BACS, direct debits, standing orders and debit-card spending all sit inside the monthly fee. Standard domestic banking runs without per-transaction charges, that’s a real advantage over NatWest, which charges 18p per BACS item on its Standard Tariff.
Picture a small contractor running a Friday-afternoon BACS batch of fifty supplier payments at month-end. Virgin Money: zero. NatWest: £9. Over a year of batched payroll and supplier runs, the BACS line alone closes most of the gap between the two monthly fees.
CHAPS payments carry a per-transfer charge for same-day large transfers, confirm the current CHAPS rate at virginmoney.com before sending. Most businesses won’t need CHAPS often; Faster Payments now covers transfers up to £1 million for most use cases.
Cash deposits route via Post Office. A per-deposit charge applies, confirm the rate at virginmoney.com.
If you bank weekly cash takings of £3,000, model the deposit fee against the monthly account fee. That’s the line that tips cash-heavy retail towards a traditional counter bank instead.
ATM withdrawals at LINK machines are free up to standard daily limits. International payments sit outside the included list, we cover those in the Card Usage section below.
Virgin Money Features and Business Banking Tools
The feature set sits halfway between high-street and challenger. Debit card, online banking, mobile app, Business Insights overlay, direct feeds to the major accounting platforms. Tidy, not flashy.
What you don’t get is FreeAgent.
NatWest bundles FreeAgent free, £14.50/month standalone. Mettle does the same. Virgin Money supports Xero, Sage and QuickBooks, the full mainstream UK accounting set, but not FreeAgent.
If your VAT-and-MTD workflow already lives inside FreeAgent, you’re paying twice: once for software, once for the account once the free period ends.
Checked against virginmoney.com in May 2026. For most small businesses the set holds up. If your accountant prefers Xero or your bookkeeper lives in QuickBooks, Virgin Money fits without friction. If FreeAgent is your VAT engine, NatWest wins on the bundled-software side.
Invoicing and Expense Management
Virgin Money doesn’t bundle a built-in invoicing tool the way Tide or Starling do. Invoicing runs through your accounting software, Xero, Sage or QuickBooks, with Virgin Money providing the bank feed underneath.
That suits a business that already has an accounting platform and an accountant in place. If you’re a sole trader who just wants to fire off five invoices a month from your phone, Tide does that inside the same app. Virgin Money expects you to pick your invoicing tool separately.
Business Insights inside the Virgin Money app and online banking gives you basic spending and cash-flow overlays, useful for a quick monthly review, not a replacement for proper expense management.
For mileage tracking, receipt capture and proper expense categorisation, you’ll want Xero Expenses or QuickBooks Receipt Capture alongside.
The catch is the missing FreeAgent integration. A sole trader who chose FreeAgent for its VAT and MTD workflow is now paying £14.50/month for software plus £6.50/month for the account after month twenty-five.
Same setup on NatWest costs £5/month after month twelve, FreeAgent included. Not the same maths.
Integrations and Accounting Software
Virgin Money connects to Xero, Sage and QuickBooks via Open Banking. We verified this at virginmoney.com in May 2026. Live bank feeds flow into your accounting platform automatically, transactions appear in your books within hours of clearing the account.
That covers the three most-used accounting platforms for UK small businesses. Your accountant keeps their preferred tool. Your bookkeeper reconciles from live data, not a CSV export from the previous month. For most setups, this is the integration list that matters.
FreeAgent is the gap. Virgin Money doesn’t support a direct FreeAgent feed, and there’s no bundled FreeAgent subscription.
If FreeAgent is your VAT-and-MTD platform, you’ll be on a manual statement import or routing transactions through Open Banking aggregators , not the native feed NatWest and Mettle customers get.
Business Insights inside online banking covers budgeting forecasts, spending breakdowns and basic cash-flow indicators, a thin layer compared to a real accounting platform, but useful for a five-minute monthly review that doesn’t involve opening a separate tool.
Virgin Money Card Usage and Payments
Day-to-day card usage on the Business Current Account is straightforward. Debit card with contactless, chip and PIN, mobile-wallet support, free UK ATM withdrawals at LINK machines, and 0.35% cashback on eligible debit-card spend.
The friction is overseas. Virgin Money uses the standard FX rate, not the mid-market rate, and there’s no multi-currency wallet to hold euros or dollars. For occasional travel, the gap is small. For monthly euro supplier payments, it compounds.
We checked rates and limits at virginmoney.com in May 2026. Domestic figures are stable. FX figures move with the market, confirm before any large overseas transfer.
Spending, Transfers and Limits
UK debit-card spending, Faster Payments, BACS, direct debits and standing orders are all included in the monthly fee. A standing order for monthly rent or your quarterly VAT carries no transaction charge. Direct debits for utilities sit inside the bundle.
Cashback runs at 0.35% on eligible debit-card purchases for the Business Current Account, capped at £500/year. We verified the M Account earns 0.25% on debit-card spend with no stated cap as of May 2026.
If your card spend is concentrated on supplier payments and travel, that’s real money back on routine activity.
Cash withdrawal limits at LINK ATMs run to standard daily caps, typically £500/day. For a builder paying weekly cash to subcontractors, plan two days ahead. The cap is a planning constraint, not a blocker.
CHAPS payments carry a per-transfer charge for same-day large transfers, confirm the rate at virginmoney.com before sending. Overdraft access on the main account runs subject to credit assessment. Establish trading history before applying if you’re opening from cold.
Overseas Payments and FX Fees
International transfers use Virgin Money’s standard FX rate, which sits above mid-market. There’s no multi-currency wallet inside the account, you can’t hold euros or dollars in sub-accounts the way Wise or Airwallex allow. Every overseas payment converts at the standard rate on the day.
Wise quotes from 0.43% at the mid-market rate. The gap on a £5,000 euro supplier payment is typically £25–£75 against Virgin Money’s standard rate. Not catastrophic per transfer. Recurring on every transfer.
If your quarterly VAT and monthly payroll run in sterling, FX doesn’t touch you. If you’re paying a German supplier on the 15th of every month and invoicing a US client in dollars, the spread hits you every transaction. It adds up fast.
We’ve seen FX-heavy businesses run Virgin Money as the main sterling account for free-period cashback, with Wise or Airwallex as the FX layer.
Wise is free to open and rates are transparent. That workaround keeps the Virgin Money free runway intact and trims the FX bill.
Virgin Money Customer Reviews and Ratings
Trustpilot sits at 3.3 out of 5 from 12,700+ reviews, verified at trustpilot.com in May 2026. That places Virgin Money mid-tier, comfortably above NatWest (1.4/5) and Santander (1.5/5), well below Starling (4.1/5) and Monzo (4.6/5).
If you’re comparing against the big-three, mid-tier is the upper end of what the high-street segment delivers. NatWest, Barclays and Santander sit in the bottom group on Trustpilot. Virgin Money sits above them.
Business Moneyfacts Awards 2025 named Virgin Money Best Service from a Business Bank. That’s an industry-judged award on service metrics, not a customer-vote average, it weighs differently from Trustpilot.
Together, the two data points suggest the floor on service is higher than the headline number implies. We cross-checked both sources in May 2026.
Review-base context matters. The 12,700+ Trustpilot figure covers all Virgin Money products, mortgages, personal accounts, savings, credit cards, not business banking in isolation. Personal-banking complaints inflate the pool. Business-specific feedback is harder to isolate from the aggregate score.
Picture a sole trader checking the app on a Tuesday morning to confirm a client payment cleared. The app works. The feed updates. The phone line picks up. That’s the day-to-day experience reflected in the Moneyfacts award and absent from headline Trustpilot averages.
The Nationwide transfer landed quietly with customers. Communications from both sides emphasised that day-to-day banking is unchanged. So far, we’ve seen no widespread complaint pattern pointing to the transfer itself, sort codes, account numbers, app and contact details all continued to work.
FAQs
Is the Virgin Money business account FSCS-protected?
Yes. Since the 2 April 2026 transfer, accounts are held by Nationwide Building Society (FRN 106078), authorised by the PRA and regulated by the FCA and PRA. Eligible deposits are protected by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme up to £120,000 per eligible depositor per institution. We confirmed this on the FCA register and the FSCS website in May 2026. If you also hold Nationwide personal deposits, count the £120,000 across both balances, not separately, same institution.
What changed when Virgin Money transferred to Nationwide?
Day-to-day banking didn’t change. Sort codes, account numbers, the Virgin Money app, online banking login and phone-support lines all continue to work exactly as before. The High Court approved the transfer on 23 February 2026, and it completed on 2 April 2026. Legally, your account is now under Nationwide Building Society. Virgin Money UK plc no longer operates as a separate regulated entity. We confirmed this from Virgin Money’s and Nationwide’s transfer communications in May 2026.
What is the monthly fee after the free period?
£6.50 a month on the Standard Tariff after the 25-month free period for new businesses. We confirmed this at virginmoney.com in May 2026. That places Virgin Money mid-pack on ongoing cost: cheaper than Barclays (£8.50) and Santander (£12.50), more than NatWest (£5) and Starling (free). The 25-month free period is the longest on the high street, so the value lives in the long head start rather than the ongoing rate.
Is there cashback on the Virgin Money business account?
Yes. The Business Current Account pays 0.35% cashback on eligible debit-card purchases, capped at £500/year, that’s £41.67/month at maximum earn. The cap matters: 0.35% of £12,000 of annual card spend hits the ceiling, and additional spend earns nothing. The M Account for Business pays 0.25% with no stated cap in published terms as of May 2026, confirm at virginmoney.com before planning around uncapped earn.
Does Virgin Money include free FreeAgent?
No. Virgin Money supports Xero, Sage and QuickBooks integrations via Open Banking, but doesn’t bundle FreeAgent. NatWest includes FreeAgent free for the lifetime of the account (one transaction per month required), worth £14.50/month standalone. If FreeAgent is your VAT-and-MTD platform, NatWest gives you £174/year of software value Virgin Money doesn’t match. If your accountant uses Xero or QuickBooks, the gap doesn’t apply.
What is the M Account for Business?
The M Account for Business is Virgin Money’s permanently-free digital business account for sole traders and limited companies with annual turnover under £1 million. No monthly fee at any point, 0.25% cashback on eligible debit-card purchases, app-based application. It’s the closest direct equivalent to NatWest Mettle, which has been closed to new applications since 2023. If you qualify, the M Account is currently the only open route to a permanently-free digital business account from a high-street bank group.
How we reviewed Virgin Money
What we assessed. We evaluated Virgin Money on pricing, contract terms, features, and eligibility. These are the factors that matter most to UK small businesses considering this provider.
Data sources. Virgin Money’s pricing page, terms, and product docs were checked directly in May 2026. No comparison sites, no press releases, no affiliate material. FCA register cross-checked for regulatory status.
Update cadence. We re-verify this page at least monthly, and whenever a provider changes pricing, eligibility, or terms. The verification date on the page reflects the most recent full review. We have no affiliate relationship with Virgin Money, see our editorial policy.