It has led to many people not being paid ahead of this weekend's bank holiday.
HSBC said it was working with other banks to ensure that customers did not lose out as a result of the problem.
"We are taking immediate steps to ensure the payments reach beneficiaries as quickly as possible," the bank said in a statement.
Further updates are being posted on its Twitter feed at @HSBC_Help_UK.
Customers of other banks who were expecting payments such as wages from HSBC accounts have not received them.
Sam Clarke told the BBC that none of his 120 employees in central London had been paid.
"There's
been very little or no valuable communication from HSBC. It's turning
into a nightmare as the hours roll on with no word," he said.
Mathew
Robinson, an accountant at a language translation company in Hove, East
Sussex, also said none of his staff had been paid today - including
himself.
"It's also a problem for our suppliers - we have over
100 suppliers and they're not getting payments from us," he said. "HSBC
have been appalling in handling this situation."
Mark Eddy of
Interlink Scaffolding said that wages payments had left the company's
account, but not reached employees' accounts. "We now have 150 irate
scaffolders," he said.
Alan Charlesworth, a Manchester business owner, said none of his staff had been paid, while Michael Foulkes tweeted:
Sam Walker, of Thurrock in Essex, said he had been unable to pay
bills: "I have to tell people I rent from why I can't pay them. I'm just
thinking of all the people who have direct debits set up for mortgages
and rent.
"I'm meant to be meeting people over the bank holiday
weekend. I've got the week off, I can't do anything at the moment. It's
terribly disheartening."
Linn Boo, of Huddersfield, is facing
fees because funds did not reach her account as expected. "I've had a
text messages saying that I'll get charged overdraft fees - as my direct
debits come out of my account on pay day," she told the BBC.
Steve White tweeted:
HSBC is understood to have contacted the Bank of England over the
problem, while the Financial Conduct Authority has also been made aware.
'Isolated issue'
Bacs,
the system used across the UK to process payments, said it was aware of
an "isolated issue" affecting one of its members. "The Bacs system is
operating as normal and we are currently working with our partners to
help resolve this as quickly as possible," a spokesperson said.
In June some 600,000 payments failed to reach enter the accounts of RBS customers.
In
November 2014 RBS was fined £56m by regulators for a 2012 software
issue that left millions of customers unable to access accounts.
RBS, NatWest, and Ulster Bank customers were affected in June 2012 after problems with a software upgrade.
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