BSB 634-634 (634634) belongs to Uniting Financial Services (Uniting Financial or UFS) for Uniting Financial Services Sydney and is located in Sydney, NSW 2000.
| BSB Number | 634-634 |
| Bank Name | Uniting Financial Services |
| Branch/Purpose | Uniting Financial Services Sydney |
| Street Address | Level 10 222 Pitt Street |
| Suburb | Sydney |
| State | NSW |
| Postcode | 2000 |
| Settlement Services | This BSB supports the following settlement services: Paper: Supports cheque clearing system Electronic: Supports Direct Entry (e.g. payroll, bills, direct debit) If you want to confirm whether it supports NPP or Osko, please contact Uniting Financial Services |
This BSB is assigned to Uniting Financial Services (Uniting Financial or UFS). The six-digit code uniquely identifies the institution for domestic electronic funds transfers (NPP, DE, RTGS) and other payments within Australia.
Branch / Service: Uniting Financial Services Sydney. Address: Level 10 222 Pitt Street, Sydney, NSW, 2000.
Yes, this BSB is valid and active. It is widely used for reliable domestic payments and recognised across Australian payment networks.
Enter the BSB (also accepted as 634634 without the hyphen) together with the recipient's account number in your online or mobile banking. This combination ensures accurate routing to the correct account.
Many Australian institutions, including Uniting Financial Services, centralise routing by assigning one BSB to multiple branches or product lines (e.g., digital banking, card or loan servicing). This simplifies payments and keeps routing consistent.
Your BSB is shown on your bank statements, within Uniting Financial Services online banking, and in the mobile app. It appears alongside your account number.
Our BSB database is updated monthly from the Australian Payments Network (AusPayNet), the official body responsible for managing BSB number allocations across Australia. All data on this page reflects the latest published records.
To ensure your payment goes to the correct account, always double-check the BSB number and account number before making a transfer. If you notice anything suspicious, contact the bank directly via their phone number or website, or report it to the Australian Cyber Security Centre.