Going by my experience youâd need more than that for Danske. Application in over a week ago and Iâve yet to receive any login details. Strangely, even though I ticked the âswitch an accountâ button, they have yet to ask for details of the account or indeed what bank it is.
Wouldnât it be that their records have been deleted after six (or maybe seven) years rather than them just getting lucky? Thinking that âneverâ really just means âhavent in the last six yearsâ as they should be deleting your records after that time has elapsed.
GDPR and financial regulations. From the GDPR perspective itâs not that they should delete it but that they must do so after it is no longer required i.e. six years after the last transaction or the account is closed.
Itâs the âis no longer requiredâ that applies here. So loan default might extend the period. However, as most sell on defaulted loans, they couldnât use that as a reason to keep the information forever.
The fact is FD keeps your data for far longer than six years, so that it knows youâve previously been a customer (and, therefore, youâre not entitled to another joining bonus). Thereâs no requirement for âsix yearsâ as you put it.
A further set time isnât forever. One of the principles of GDPR is that data can only be held as long as necessary.
That said, I could see fraud being for quite a long time.
The six years is because financial records generally need to be held for that long.
If FD has taken it upon itself to hold data forever, you could report them to the ICO. Or you could insist that they delete your data six years after the last transaction (assuming that youâve a zero balance obviously).
Maybe thatâs why their clause is akin to no bonus if youâve had an account in the last x years, because the retention policy will pick you up.
Having said that, people have been successful getting multiple switch bonuses from the same banks over the years.
Removed the other post, too inaccurate.
In cases of fraud, the period may be much longer than most other retention policies, to mitigate risk, financial loss and damages to bank and consumer.
âA bank holds personal data about its customers. This includes details of each customerâs address, date of birth and motherâs maiden name. The bank uses this information as part of its security procedures. It is appropriate for the bank to retain this data for as long as the customer has an account with the bank. Even after the account has been closed, the bank may need to continue holding some of this information for legal or operational reasons for a further set time.â