The Halifax brand will be dropped and rebranded under the name of parent company Lloyds, 17 years after Halifax became part of the Lloyds Banking Group.
The scrapping of the 173-year old high street banking brand has been planned since last year when customers of Halifax began to be able to manage their accounts across Lloyds branches and via the Lloyds app.
Existing Halifax customers will be migrated to Lloyds, with no immediate changes for customers. Account numbers and sort codes will remain the same.
The remaining Halifax high street branches will be rebranded to Lloyds by the end of 2027. There are no plans to close any branches or make any redundancies as part of the rebrand, Lloyds said.
There is no change for fellow Lloyds Banking Group brand Bank of Scotland.
Halifax mortgages will continue to be available until 2027, at which point they will rebrand to Lloyds.
The rebrand will give existing Halifax customers access to Lloyds products, including its BUPA GP services, AI financial coach and other loyalty offers.
Lloyds Banking Group was first founded in Birmingham in 1765. The group employs over 65,000 people in the UK including 3,000 in Halifax.
Halifax was founded in West Yorkshire in 1853 as a Building Society before demutualising in 1997. It merged with the Bank of Scotland in 2001 become being acquired by Lloyds Banking Group in 2009.
It was known in the eighties and nineties for its popular and quirky TV commercials.