One Lloyds Bank site in Ipswich will close down later in the year.

This morning, Lloyds Banking Group, which owns both Lloyds and Halifax, has announced 40 bank branches are to be lost from the UK's high streets.

The closures will take place between April and June of 2023 and on May 4, the Bramford Road Lloyds will close its doors for the last time.

This news comes as banks across the country have scaled back their branch networks.

The number of people using in-person services has been falling for years as more and more people do their banking online.

During the pandemic this increased, as some of those who had stuck to bank branches were forced to learn how to bank from home.

Lloyds Banking Group said the branches to be closed have seen the number of visits drop by about 60% on average in the last five years.

A spokesman said: “Branches play an important part in our strategy but we need to have them in the right places, where they are well-used.

“We’ll continue to invest in branches that are being used regularly, alongside our online, mobile app and telephone services.”

The bank branches that will close include 18 Halifax sites in Golders Green, north London, Maldon, Essex, and Bletchley, Buckinghamshire, among others.

The 22 Lloyds branches to be lost also include those in Dagenham, east London, Twickenham in south-west London and Harrow in north-west London.

All the branches are within a third of a mile of at least one free-to-use cashpoint and a Post Office, the group said.

The closures will not lead to any job losses, it added.

The latest announcement brings the total number of bank branch closures that have been announced so far this year to 64.

Earlier in the month TSB announced it would be shutting nine sites, and Barclays named 15 for closure.