If you have been wondering who the actor in the Nationwide advert is, the answer is Dominic West.
The British actor plays Hugo, the arrogant chief executive of fictional rival lender A.N.Y Bank in Nationwide Building Society’s long-running “A Good Way to Bank” advertising campaign.
However, the adverts became far bigger than a celebrity commercial campaign.
They triggered a national debate about UK bank branch closures, high street banking, advertising standards, and whether Nationwide’s marketing claims accurately reflected reality.
This guide explains who Dominic West is, what the Nationwide adverts were designed to achieve, why the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) intervened, and what Nationwide's branch promise means today.
Who Is Dominic West?
Dominic West is one of Britain's best-known television actors.
Many viewers recognise him from:
The Wire as Detective Jimmy McNulty
The Crown as Prince Charles
300
The Affair
His Nationwide character Hugo is deliberately exaggerated.
The fictional banker represents many of the criticisms frequently aimed at large banking groups, including:
Branch closures
Executive bonuses
Shareholder-first decision making
Reduced face-to-face customer service
Distance from local communities
The campaign positions Nationwide as the opposite.
As a customer-owned mutual rather than a shareholder-owned bank, Nationwide has repeatedly used branch access and community banking as key marketing themes.
What Is Nationwide's “A Good Way to Bank” Campaign?
The campaign was created to highlight Nationwide's commitment to keeping physical branches open while many major banking brands reduced their high street presence.
In the adverts, Dominic West's character often appears detached from ordinary customers and obsessed with corporate targets.
The joke is simple:
Hugo says the quiet part out loud.
Nationwide then presents itself as the more customer-focused alternative.
The campaign became one of the most discussed UK banking advertising campaigns because it directly referenced a real issue affecting millions of customers: disappearing bank branches.
The Reality of UK Bank Branch Closures
Bank branch closures have transformed the UK banking landscape over the past decade.
According to figures repeatedly cited by consumer groups and banking reports, more than 6,500 UK bank branches have closed since 2015.
Major banking groups including:
Lloyds Banking Group
NatWest Group
Barclays
HSBC
Santander UK
have all announced significant branch reduction programmes.
Many banks argue that customers increasingly use mobile apps and online banking instead of visiting branches.
Critics argue that closures disproportionately affect:
Older customers
Rural communities
Disabled customers
People who rely on cash services
Small local businesses
The issue has become politically sensitive because some towns have been left with no traditional banking facilities at all.
Why Did the ASA Ban the Nationwide Advert?
In April 2024, the UK's Advertising Standards Authority ruled that parts of the campaign were misleading.
The regulator found that viewers could reasonably interpret the adverts as suggesting:
Nationwide was not closing branches
Nationwide had not recently closed branches
Nationwide would not close branches in the future
The ASA concluded those impressions were inaccurate.
The regulator noted that Nationwide had previously closed branches and that important qualifications regarding its branch commitment were not sufficiently prominent within some versions of the advertising.
As a result, the adverts were banned in their existing form.
The ASA stated that the advertisements "must not appear again in their current form."
What Was Nationwide's Branch Promise?
At the centre of the dispute was Nationwide's Branch Promise.
When the original adverts aired, Nationwide had pledged not to leave any town or city where it operated until at least 2026.
The ASA found many consumers were unlikely to notice that limitation when watching the adverts.
Since then, Nationwide has significantly expanded the commitment.
Today, Nationwide says all of its branches will remain open until at least 2030.
The organisation says this includes hundreds of locations across the UK and reflects ongoing demand for in-person banking services.
Is Nationwide Actually Different From Other Banks?
The answer depends on the comparison being made.
Nationwide has closed branches in the past. That was one of the key issues identified by the ASA.
However, Nationwide has also generally maintained a larger proportion of its branch network than many major competitors over the last decade.
More recently, Nationwide extended its branch commitment to 2030 while many competitors continue announcing closures.
The building society now says it operates the UK's largest branch network and remains the last banking branch in dozens of towns across Britain.
That distinction forms the foundation of the advertising strategy.
Why the Dominic West Campaign Worked
From a marketing perspective, the campaign succeeded because it turned a complex banking issue into a recognisable character.
Instead of discussing branch strategy, Nationwide created Hugo.
Instead of talking about corporate banking culture, it used satire.
The result was memorable, shareable advertising that generated discussion well beyond traditional financial services audiences.
Even the ASA ruling generated additional publicity.
For Nationwide, the campaign helped position branch access as a competitive advantage at a time when many consumers felt frustrated by disappearing high street services.
FAQ
Who is the actor in the Nationwide advert?
The actor is Dominic West.
What character does Dominic West play?
He plays Hugo, the fictional chief executive of A.N.Y Bank.
Why was the Nationwide advert banned?
The ASA ruled that some claims about branch closures could mislead consumers regarding Nationwide's past and future branch closure activity.
Has Nationwide closed branches before?
Yes. The ASA ruling specifically referenced previous Nationwide branch closures.
Is Nationwide still keeping branches open?
Nationwide currently says it will keep all branches open until at least 2030, subject to exceptional circumstances beyond its control.
Final Verdict
The actor in the Nationwide advert is Dominic West, but the campaign became about much more than celebrity casting.
It tapped into growing concerns about disappearing bank branches, access to face-to-face banking, and trust in financial institutions.
While the ASA ruled parts of the campaign misleading, the debate helped spotlight a wider issue affecting communities across the UK.
For Nationwide, that discussion remains central to its brand positioning today.