Is NatWest down in Tyldesley, Borough of Wigan, England?
No problems detected
If you are having issues, please submit a report below.
National Westminster Bank, commonly known as NatWest, is a major retail and commercial bank in the United Kingdom. NatWest offers current accounts, savings, investments, loans, credit cards and other financial products.
Problems in the last 24 hours in Tyldesley, England
The chart below shows the number of NatWest reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Tyldesley and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.
At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at NatWest. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by NatWest users through our website.
-
Mobile App (33%)
-
Login (25%)
-
Transactions (17%)
-
Website (17%)
-
Withdrawals (8%)
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.
NatWest Issues Reports Near Tyldesley, England
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Tyldesley and nearby locations:
-
Simon Burrows
(@simonburrows09) reported
from
Sale, England
@MartinSLewis Booked a holiday in August 2020 and @easyJet cancelled the flights last week Now @NatWestGroup are telling us because we booked the day we did against government travel advice nearly a year ago our NatWest travel insurance doesn’t cover us. Please Help ! #cancelled
-
ritesh suthar
(@ritsut) reported
from
Salford, England
@NatWestGroup is your residential NatWest mortgage phone number down? Tried calling but the line does not ring…..please help! Tel num I tried is: 0345 302 0190
NatWest Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
-
Victoria Atherton
(@vvatherton) reported
@sophielouisecc @Barclays NatWest have such tight security you can barely access your own account half the time as they suspect you’re a fraudster.
-
Liz🐁🐁🏴
(@lizbarnesrhyl) reported
@RefugeesGB @sophielouisecc @Barclays I’m happy with NatWest and their customer service. The app for my iPad is good too. Any problems have been sorted quickly.
-
Tim Arnold
(@timarnold) reported
I've since received a reply from a Natwest 'human' on X which shows some care and understanding. Which begs the question: why make automated responses the default, if good old fashioned human connection is the only thing that makes a customer feel human themselves?
-
VIKING BINGO BORG⚔️
(@Borg74) reported
The Weekly Time Frame: A Game of Patience… Then Reward Take a closer look at NatWest Bank #NWG at 495.7. At the start of this year, the MACD-Histogram printed a lower low while price printed a higher low, a classic case of bullish hidden divergence. Beneath the surface, momentum suggested the bears were in control, yet they failed to push price below Point A. What looked like pressure was actually just a pullback: a key signal of underlying strength. What followed? A 50% rally off a pink bar. No wonder the Vikings like it pink. Fast forward seven months, and we’re now seeing an almost identical setup. That’s the beauty of trading higher time frames. It becomes a mechanical process. You identify the pattern, then plan your entry on a lower time frame like the Daily. Define your position size (i.e., risk), and write down three key numbers: • Entry price (on the Daily TF or lower) • Stop loss (based on the Daily TF) • Target price (based on the Weekly TF) That’s the difference between a trader and a gambler. A trader plans ahead. To me, that’s as straightforward as it gets. No need to crowd your screen with dozens of indicators or complicated drawings. Master this setup on the Weekly Time Frame and you’ll be trading like a conquering Viking. Put NatWest on your watchlist today. Look for a pullback long entry on the Daily. Will it work again just because it worked before? Of course not—each trade is a unique, random event. But just ask my friend @davea1076, who trades off the Weekly. Since adopting this approach, his success rate and R-multiples have improved significantly. Thank you to my other friend @_580592613156 for spotting the set up.
-
Mr. PD1
(@DewanPd) reported
@MohammadKaif What’s with the ex indian cricketers with 13 test caps and average of 32 chiming in and being critical of a young lad who’s captaining his country for the first time and will probably be the Conner-stone of indian cricket for a decade. Thanks for the Natwest mate but pipe down!
-
mamiepoule💙🇫🇷 🇮🇪 🇨🇦 FBPE💜☘️
(@whitepatricia49) reported
@skidders67 By phone or physically going into bank..? I had an issue with NatWest, but live abroad, went to my local branch, was seen and everything was resolved without any problems. Don’t go in angry, be pleasant…
-
Adam Craig, PB (Xe/Xer/Xerxes)🌳🗽🍉🔻Hummus Lover
(@ThePersecutdOne) reported
@SaulStaniforth She's a mental midget. £18Bn to Ukraine; £11Bn a year (min.) on illegal immigrants; £7Bn on Afghans; £22 Bn on carbon capture scam; £10.5Bn Natwest bailout; £23.4Bn to stuff landlords pockets with Housing Benefit. £91.9Bn pissed down the drain right there.
-
tiana 🇬🇧 🏴
(@HempseyTan49795) reported
@sophielouisecc @Barclays I've been with natwest for about 15 yrs, no issues yet.
-
Teds
(@Tedtalks13) reported
illegally logged my natwest app out on the mirror muppet issue
-
Lee David Rusbridge
(@lynchdavidlee73) reported
@LloydsBank Not Happy with the customer service as trying to transfer money from my lloyds to a friends natwest account would you ever ask a customer what mobile device i,m using and when did i change my mobile number & to log in to my Lloyds account while on the phone