PRA consults on raising leverage ratio threshold to £70 billion retail deposits

The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) is consulting on changing the retail deposits leverage ratio threshold to £70 billion – an increase of £20 billion.
Published on 05 March 2025

News release

The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) is consulting on changing the retail deposits leverage ratio threshold to £70 billion – an increase of £20 billion.

The leverage ratio is designed to give a simple percentage indicator of how much capital a firm has to fund its activities. The PRA currently requires firms with over £50 billion in retail deposits or £10 billion of non-UK assets to meet a minimum leverage ratio requirement of 3.25% plus buffers. These thresholds took effect in 2016 and 2023 respectively, and are designed to capture major UK banks, building societies and investment firms.

The PRA is now proposing to raise the retail deposits threshold, increasing it to £70 billion to reflect nominal GDP growth since 2016. This increase would ensure that the threshold continued to capture major UK firms, whilst smaller firms below the new threshold would have more space to grow before becoming subject to the leverage ratio requirement.

Sam Woods, Deputy Governor for Prudential Regulation and CEO of the PRA said:

“Guarding against excessive leverage in our banking system is essential for economic stability, but we should achieve that in a proportionate way. Today’s proposals will support growth and innovation by giving smaller banks more space to grow before entering the leverage regime.”

The PRA is not proposing changes to the £10 billion non-UK asset threshold, which was implemented much more recently than the retail deposits threshold, and continues to operate as intended.

Notes to editors

  1. Read more about the Leverage Ratio in the FPC statement and the PRA Rulebook.
  2. The consultation will open on Wednesday 5 March 2025, and close at 11.59pm on Thursday 5 June.
  3. Read the full consultation paper.