Palestinians in Gaza say the Bank of Palestine is freezing or closing customer accounts without adequate warning or explanation, cutting people off from access to salaries, aid and personal savings. Several account holders interviewed by Middle East Eye report that after their accounts were restricted or shut down, they could not pay rent or buy essentials or support their families. Because Gaza faces chronic liquidity shortages and worsening banknote conditions, many residents rely on banking apps and digital wallets to transfer and access money; some say their mobile wallets were also suspended after their bank accounts were closed.

Account holders say they received little or no process information and were given no clear route to challenge the decisions. Lawyers in Gaza protested and the Palestinian Bar Association in Gaza condemned the account closures, describing them as unjustified and warning they harm families already affected by the war. The Bar Association says around 700 lawyers were affected as part of a wider group of nearly 2,000 suspended accounts.

A human rights monitor official alleges that closures follow risk-based internal processes and recommendations from Palestinian authorities, and that accounts of people reported killed during the war may be closed even after families complete inheritance procedures. The Bank of Palestine rejects the allegations, saying actions follow applicable laws and instructions, and that cases involving deceased customers are handled through legal inheritance procedures. The Palestinian Monetary Authority did not respond to a comment request by publication time.