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What lenders do with your data
To assess an application, a lender collects and processes company and director information — identity, credit, bank data — and shares some with credit reference and fraud-prevention agencies. This is lawful under UK GDPR when done for the legitimate purpose of assessing and administering the loan, and set out in their privacy notice.
Your rights over it
Under UK data protection law you can ask what a lender holds about you, have errors corrected, and understand how automated decisions are made. If you withdraw, the lender should stop using your data for that purpose, though records of any search already run persist for their normal period. Read the privacy notice before you share anything.
Applying safely
Only apply through the lender's own secure (HTTPS) site, check the firm is genuine, and use regulated Open Banking rather than sharing banking passwords. Never send bank login details by email. A legitimate lender is transparent about data handling; evasiveness is a warning sign. The questions-to-ask answer includes checking this.
Frequently asked questions
Can I find out what data a lender holds on me?
Yes — UK GDPR gives you the right to request the personal data a lender holds and to have inaccuracies corrected. Reputable lenders explain what they collect and why in their privacy notice before you apply.
Is my data safe if I do not complete the application?
If you withdraw, the lender should cease using your data for the application, though any credit search already run remains on file for its usual period. Choose lenders who are clear about retention and deletion.
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