I'm hoping someone can tell me if I'm wasting my time.
I had a FlexBasic account with NWide - no overdraft facility - and used the card for a pay-at-pump transaction in November 2016. This took the account balance to £-74 of unauthorised overdraft.
NWide reported this account as 6 months in arrears to all CRAs from Nov 2016 until Feb 2019 when I settled it. I believe that they should have been reporting a default any time from Feb 2017 - April 2017 per the ICO rules around reporting of defaults.
I complained to NWide about this and their response was:
"Our findings
There is no arranged or unarranged facility with a FlexBasic account. There are some transactions which could push your account balance below zero and into an unarranged overdrawn position. If your balance does go below zero, your account will be frozen until it is brought back into credit.
The account went overdrawn by £74.00 on 4 November 2016 after you made a pay at pump transaction for £75.00. The account remained overdrawn by this amount until 13 February 2019 when you cleared the arrears. The account wasn't used after this and was dormant until the account was then closed on 1 July 2020.
Credit referencing agencies will report your information a month behind, looking at your credit file it does show a true reflection of the positions your account has been in.
I appreciate that it may not have been communicated that we don’t apply a default, but it is our process to restrict an account until it is brought back into a credit balance because we wouldn’t look to apply defaults to a FlexBasic account.
Our decision
This is not an account that our Collections Team will issue a Default Notice with, as the account doesn't come with credit facilities such as an overdraft, so this wouldn't be within our process to Default this type of account and issue it to a third-party agent.
I would like to apologise for any inconvenience this may cause, but we wouldn’t be looking to apply a default to your account."
On reading the ICO guidance I'm pretty sure that Nationwide are wrong in this decision, what is the best way to fight this? Do I need a solicitor?
I had a FlexBasic account with NWide - no overdraft facility - and used the card for a pay-at-pump transaction in November 2016. This took the account balance to £-74 of unauthorised overdraft.
NWide reported this account as 6 months in arrears to all CRAs from Nov 2016 until Feb 2019 when I settled it. I believe that they should have been reporting a default any time from Feb 2017 - April 2017 per the ICO rules around reporting of defaults.
I complained to NWide about this and their response was:
"Our findings
There is no arranged or unarranged facility with a FlexBasic account. There are some transactions which could push your account balance below zero and into an unarranged overdrawn position. If your balance does go below zero, your account will be frozen until it is brought back into credit.
The account went overdrawn by £74.00 on 4 November 2016 after you made a pay at pump transaction for £75.00. The account remained overdrawn by this amount until 13 February 2019 when you cleared the arrears. The account wasn't used after this and was dormant until the account was then closed on 1 July 2020.
Credit referencing agencies will report your information a month behind, looking at your credit file it does show a true reflection of the positions your account has been in.
I appreciate that it may not have been communicated that we don’t apply a default, but it is our process to restrict an account until it is brought back into a credit balance because we wouldn’t look to apply defaults to a FlexBasic account.
Our decision
This is not an account that our Collections Team will issue a Default Notice with, as the account doesn't come with credit facilities such as an overdraft, so this wouldn't be within our process to Default this type of account and issue it to a third-party agent.
I would like to apologise for any inconvenience this may cause, but we wouldn’t be looking to apply a default to your account."
On reading the ICO guidance I'm pretty sure that Nationwide are wrong in this decision, what is the best way to fight this? Do I need a solicitor?
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