Is NatWest down in Taverham, Norfolk, England?
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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 Taverham, England
The chart below shows the number of NatWest reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Taverham and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by NatWest users through our website.
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Website (34%)
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Login (25%)
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Transactions (23%)
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Mobile App (14%)
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Withdrawals (2%)
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Transfer (2%)
Community Discussion
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NatWest Issues Reports Near Taverham, England
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Taverham and nearby locations:
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oliver codling
(@OliverCodling) reported
from
Norwich, England
Looks like I’ll need to visit a NatWest branch, during a pandemic, to transfer my own money. What an unbelievably **** experience this has been from start to end.
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oliver codling
(@OliverCodling) reported
from
Taverham, England
Trying to transfer some money to my solicitor via NatWest’s online banking and mobile banking app has been a truly awful and frustrating experience. At this rate, it would be quicker to withdraw the cash and post it.
NatWest Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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DiligentBadger
(@diligentbadger) reported
@MartinSLewis I’ve been with NatWest about 40 yrs. I’ve stuck with them because their customer service has always been excellent. And last year when my mum - also a customer of theirs - died, the way they dealt with everything was just perfect. That experience has made me a customer for life.
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alinor
(@Alice12Norman) reported
@MartinSLewis Been with Natwest since they were invented: with National Provincial before the merger with Westminster. Any problems (very few over the years) quickly resolved. No local branch any more - but then, no local branch of any bank...
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JazzyShadow
(@shadowjazzy1) reported
@GordonBrown YOU personally ruined so many people’s working lives when YOU personally gave permission for RBS to buy NatWest An unmitigated disaster which ended in the crash of 2008 YOU have no moral judgement YOU were the worst Chancellor until Rachel Reeves came along. Another stupid stunt.
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Andrew Johnson
(@apgj67) reported
@sophielouisecc @Barclays Not rbs NatWest they are terrible
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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.
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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.
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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?
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Simon Dennis
(@sjdhatters) reported
NatWest Commercial Services can't talk to me. I'm not authorised. I'll give you a code and call you back. Can you ring my landline as I don't have a mobile signal at home. No @NatWest_Help Worst Dept on the planet. Never fail to not help the customer and make my life difficult
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ConservativeChitChat
(@ConservativeCCh) reported
@sophielouisecc Phone apps for HSBC, NatWest + Chase = pick 6 digit pin similar to Barclays app Phone app for Halifax = specific letters from memorable word, also good to use Phone app for Nationwide = having to remember specific numbers from 6 digit customer number (always have to look it up)
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ConservativeChitChat
(@ConservativeCCh) reported
@sophielouisecc HSBC or Nationwide.... possibly also NatWest... I've been testing out a buttload for the past year or so. Opening an HSBC current a/c also gives you access to their "online bonus saver" savings account, which pays interest monthly.