If you are looking for the right place to sign in to your bank, the rule is simple: only ever type your account details on the bank's own domain. Look-alike URLs — extra letters, a hyphen, a different country code — are how phishing sites work, and they get past readers every day. This page lists 0 bank login guides. Each one has been checked manually so the "official site" link points to the bank itself, not an aggregator or a blog reposting a login form.
Banks usually publish their online-banking URL on the back of their debit card, in the mobile app, and on printed statements. When you reach a login page, the address bar should show the bank's actual domain over HTTPS — for a UK retail bank, that often ends in .co.uk; for a US bank, the full corporate domain. Anything else, however convincing the page looks, is worth a second check. If a link on this site ever fails that test, please tell us at editorial@cee-trust.org and we will fix it.
If you can't sign in
The most common reason a working customer suddenly cannot log in is an out-of-date phone number on the account — the one-time passcode is sent to a phone the bank still has on file. The second most common: the lock-out timer after several wrong attempts. Banks will not unlock an account from a chat box; you usually need to call from a verified phone number, which is on the bank's "Contact" page.