To compensate, the roughly 20,000 staff selling products such
mortgages, credit cards and loans to individuals and businesses will get
an average 5% pay rise.
The bank said the new system was simpler and fairer, and would put less pressure on staff on sell products.
It also claimed to be the first major UK bank to take this step.
"We're
determined to keep doing things differently and we can only continue to
rebuild our customers' trust if they truly believe that we are
completely focused on helping them with their financial needs - which is
why we will scrap all incentives for customer-facing employees," said
Les Matheson, head of personal and business banking at NatWest and RBS.
The
move will also ensure that staff at less busy branches will not lose
out compared with those doing the same job at busier outlets.
There have been calls from independent bodies to change the way retail bank
staff are paid following various mis-selling scandals, such as payment
protection insurance, known as PPI, credit card fraud protection and
swaps.
The government currently owns a 73% stake in RBS after bailing the bank out during the financial crisis in 2008.
Scrapping bonuses only applies to staff working in retail banking, not investment banking, which is where the huge losses were made that led to government intervention.
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