Record amount of cash deposited at Post Offices in June

Post Office saw the highest ever amount of cash deposited and withdrawn from its 11,500 branches nationwide in June, according to the latest data from its Cash Tracker.

In total, £2.87 billion was deposited and withdrawn in cash in June with personal cash deposits exceeding £1bn for the fourth month in a row and business cash deposits exceeding £1bn for the first time in over 18 months, totalling £1.02bn in June.

The last time business deposits exceeded £1bn, excluding Christmas, was October 2019 (£1.05bn). Personal cash withdrawals were also at their highest level since March 2020.



Business cash deposits were up almost 24% month-on-month as the economy continued to unlock in June and consumers returned to the High Street.

A Post Office survey of more than 500 UK small businesses last week revealed that two thirds (66%) feel that the continued use of cash is important to the recovery of the UK retail industry post-lockdown. Nearly 1 in 5 (18%) said that they depended on their local Post Office branch for cash and banking services.

The previous highest month for business cash deposits, since the Covid-19 pandemic reached the UK was September 2020 (£965 million). Pre Covid, the highest amount ever deposited, excluding Christmas, had been £1.13bn in July 2019.

Personal cash deposits exceeded a billion pounds for the fourth successive month. In June, £1.2bn was deposited over the counters, which is a record amount at Post Offices and was up 12% month-on-month (£1.06bn in May).

Whilst personal cash deposits in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland continue to exceed pre-Covid levels of deposits seen in January 2020, business cash deposits have not yet fully recovered to pre-Covid levels.

In Wales, business cash deposits totalled £49.3m in June broadly the same as pre-Covid, £49.9m in January 2020. However, in Scotland, business cash deposits totalled £83.3m in the same month, compared with £103m in January 2020. In Northern Ireland, they totalled £31.9m compared with £41.2mn January 2020.

Personal cash withdrawals totalled £636m in June, the highest amount withdrawn from Post Office counters since March 2020 (£634m), excluding Christmas. Personal cash withdrawals were up over 9% month-on-month. Research published last week by the Post Office found that 72% of UK consumers believe that cash is an important consumer right.

In Northern Ireland and Wales, cash withdrawals exceeded pre-Covid levels of March 2020, whilst in Scotland the amount withdrawn in June 2021 (£50.2 million) was almost the same as the amount withdrawn in March 2020 (£51.6 million).

Overall, cash deposits and withdrawals at Post Offices in June amounted to £2.87bn. This compares with £2.49bn in May and £2.45bn in April.

Martin Kearsley, banking director at Post Office, said: “Millions of people and small businesses continue to rely on cash to budget, save and survive. Exceeding £1 billion in business cash deposits for the first time in over 18 months is a milestone moment for Post Office and especially for Postmasters, demonstrating the vital role they play in the cash ecosystem in their local community as we come out of Covid19 restrictions.

“Many branches open late in the evening and at weekends, providing local businesses with a convenient location to deposit much needed takings and in turn serve their own customers longer too. The ability to withdraw cash securely over the counter is helping consumers who rely on cash to access it locally, resulting in more cash being spent with small businesses within local communities.”

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