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Atom Bank set to move into Newcastle city centre head office within weeks

The news comes as the bank publishes annual results in which deposits topped £7.5bn up from £5.7bn

Atom Bank is moving into The Pattern Shop in Newcastle(Image: Atom bank)

Challenger bank Atom is weeks away from moving from Durham into its new head office in Newcastle city centre, its CEO has revealed.

The digital only bank, which marked 10 years in business last year, announced earlier this year how it had signed up to relocate its headquarters to the Pattern Shop, in the former home of The Robert Stephenson and Co works, where the world famous Rocket was built in the 1880s. At the time the company said its office investment marked a ‘bold statement about how we see the future of work’.

Now the bank has announced in latest accounts how its relocation plans are now “well advanced” in “an important investment in the future of the franchise and one that will help us to drive delivery of the business plan and the realisation of our strategic vision”. Based in Founder’s Place, the Pattern Shop marks the latest redevelopment to take shape at the site, with a £9m restoration to turn it into a modern office space, having previously been left derelict since 2008.

The office is currently being fitted out ahead of welcoming the bank’s staff at the end of September.

Atom’s CEO Mark Mullen said: “Having spent our first decade in Durham, this Autumn we will move into our new HQ building, the Pattern Shop, located in the Stephenson Quarter near the centre of Newcastle upon Tyne. The building has an extraordinary heritage. It was the design and manufacturing centre for the pioneering Stephenson brothers during the 1820s to 1850s.

"What was once a cradle of manufacturing and innovation for the first industrial revolution will soon become a centre of excellence for Atom as we begin the next phase of growth in our business.”

His comments come as the firm published its annual results for the year ended March 31 2025, in which total interest income rose from £441m to £442m, driven by growth in lending, and deposits topped £7.5bn, up from £5.7bn. Net interest income was £101m, up from £99m, while operating profit was £25m, down from £27m.

Meanwhile, staff costs increased by 13% to £37m with the average number of employees increasing from 504 to 544. SME unsecured loans totalled £0.2bn, down from £0.3bn, while SME secured loans stood at £0.8bn, up from £0.6bn. Mortgages reached £4.2bn, up from £3.2bn.