Consumers lodged 5,660 complaints about their credit cards – the highest ever level for a three-month-period – according to new figures released today by the Financial Ombudsman Service.
The organisation, which acts as a free resolution service for consumers and their financial providers, confirmed 3,086 of those complaints were due to perceived unaffordable or irresponsible lending by financial firms.
Comparatively, in the same period in 2022/23 (from 1st October to 31st December) there were 3,216 credit card complaints, of which just 665 were about irresponsible/unaffordable lending.
Almost three quarters of the credit card and unaffordable lending complaints highlighted in the new figures were brought by professional representatives, compared with just a quarter of these complaints in the third quarter of 2022/23.
While the use of credit cards has increased, consumer complaints show that not everyone is happy with the service they receive – in particular, people believe financial providers should have intervened over persistently high credit balances, high credit limits or provided lower interest rates.
Commenting on the new figures, Abby Thomas, Chief Executive and Chief Ombudsman of the Financial Ombudsman Service, said:
“Given that many people are struggling in the current economic environment, it’s concerning to see such a significant rise in credit card complaints.
“Owing significant amounts of debt can be stressful and it’s important that consumers are treated fairly and transparently by financial service providers.
“Lenders have a duty to support their customers whatever their circumstances and are obliged to help people who are struggling with debt.”
In total, across a variety of financial products, the Ombudsman received almost 7,500 complaints about perceived irresponsible and unaffordable lending, of which 70% were from professional representatives. The uphold rate for those complaints brought by professional representatives which the ombudsman resolved in this period was 14% compared to 44% for consumers who brought complaints directly to our service.
Viv Kelly, Ombudsman Director for Consumer Credit at the Financial Ombudsman Service, said:
“The vast majority of unaffordable lending complaints are being brought by professional representatives. While professional representatives have an important role to play, we’re currently seeing some poorly evidenced complaints.
“In these instances, uphold rates can be considerably lower than if a consumer brings a complaint directly to our service”.
“Consumers don’t need to use a professional representative to bring a complaint to our service. People can come directly to our free, independent service and we’ll see if we can help resolve their complaint.”
Overall, across all complaint categories, the Ombudsman received 47,868 new complaints in the third quarter of this financial year. By comparison, in the same period in 2022/23, the Financial Ombudsman received a total of 41,303 new cases.
Aside from credit cards, the other four categories in the top five most complained about products were current accounts, hire purchase (motor), car/motorcycle insuranceand buildings insurance, all of which saw year-on-year increases.
Current accounts continue to be the most complained about product with complaints up by over a quarter to 7,804 when compared to the same period in 2022/23. Fraud and scams are still the main driver of current account complaints. In the third quarter of this financial year the ombudsman received 4,618 fraud and scam complaints in relation to current accounts, compared to 3,768 in the same period in 2022/23.
Hire purchase (motor) is the third most complained about product with 5,419 complaints this quarter compared to 2,987 cases in the third quarter of 2022/23. Motor finance commission complaints made up around half of the new hire purchase (motor) complaints the Ombudsman received. Since this period, the Financial Conduct Authority announced that it is going to review historical motor finance commission arrangements and sales. As part of this, it’s paused the eight-week deadline for motor finance firms to provide a final response to consumers’ complaints about some commission models. It has also extended the time for customers to come to us if the firm response on these cases has not resolved cases.
Car/motorcycle insurance is the fourth most complained about product with complaints up by 50% to 4,123 in the third quarter when compared to the third quarter in 2022/23.
Buildings insurance complaints are up by almost 30% to 1,666 complaints when compared to the same period in 2022/23.
The Ombudsman has previously highlighted that the rise in some insurance complaints is due to a number of factors including an increase in insurers delaying claim payouts, contractor availability impacting the speed of repairs, and an inability to source materials.
On average, across all financial products, the Financial Ombudsman Service upheld 35% of the complaints it resolved which is in line with last year’s figure.
A breakdown of the most complained about products that the Financial Ombudsman received is below.
Product | Q3 2023/24 | Q3 2022/23 |
Current accounts | 7,804 | 6,082 |
Credit cards | 5,660 | 3,216 |
Hire purchase (motor) | 5,419 | 2,987 |
Car/motorcycle insurance | 4,123 | 2,769 |
Buildings insurance | 1,666 | 1,299 |