Lloyds, Halifax, and Bank of Scotland apologized to millions of users after they reported app and online banking outages.
The widespread technical glitch left mobile banking customers across the UK completely locked out of their accounts, unable to view balances or transfer funds.
The banking group updated on Wednesday that its services are now back online, after thousands of customers experienced problems accessing online banking.
The news comes as millions of UK banking customers were left unable to access their funds, view balances, or transfer money during a widespread mobile banking blackout.
According to online outage tracker Downdetector, users started reporting problems at around 11:15 BST.
Thousands of people reported problems across the three banks, Lloyds, Bank of Scotland, and Halifax, owned by the big finance group.
One Lloyds customer on social media said they were not able to access external online banking on the app or the website.
While the other Halifax and Bank of Scotland customers reported that the banking apps went down as they tried to send money, make online transactions, or pay bills.
A spokesperson for the bank giant said on Wednesday afternoon: "All our services are back up and running."
"We are sorry for the inconvenience caused, and if customers are still experiencing any issues, please leave it a few minutes and try again."
Lloyds Banking Group is the UK's largest retail and commercial banking provider, with 26 million customers across Lloyds Bank, Halifax, and Bank of Scotland.
When a massive banking group such as Lloyds, Halifax, and Bank of Scotland suffers a digital blackout, the operational impact ripples across the entire UK financial sector.
This is not the first time the Lloyds Banking Group has experienced such issues.
Britain's popular bank has faced multiple outages in 2025, specifically during crucial payday periods in January and February, affecting approximately 700,000 customers.
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