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Instant payment transactions to exceed 235 billion globally by 2027

National Audit Office launches review of FCA's effectiveness
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A study has found that the number of consumer instant payments, any payment outside of a card network that is capable of receiving funds in 10 seconds or under, will exceed 235 billion in 2027; up from 74 billion in 2023.

This growth of 218% will be driven by lower merchant acceptance costs when compared to traditional card schemes.

This is of particular importance now, as many merchants will be seeking to reduce costs and protect margins through the global economic downturn – assuming this does actually arrive.

70% of consumer payments to be Instant by 2027

The research found that the transition to this type of  payment for consumers will rapidly expand; reaching 70% of all global transactions by 2027, up from just over 30% in 2023.

By 2027, the three largest markets for consumer instant payments globally, by transaction volume, will be China, led by the popularity of WeChat Pay and AliPay; India, driven by UPI; and the US, brought by the introduction of FedNow.

They rank as follows:

  1. China
  2. India
  3. US

The research recommends that instant payment vendors focus on building value-added services within their offering, including real-time fraud prevention or automation of payments for B2B use cases, in order to benefit from this shift in a highly competitive market.

Merchants to gain

The research identified that the lower costs of instant payments allow merchants to pass on savings to consumers, as well as benefitting from increased speed of transfers.

With instant settlement, merchants will receive payments within seconds, reducing payment settlement delays.

“Payment processors, who provide payments acceptance for merchants, should look to offer payments integration via a single API,” says report author Michael Greenwood.

“This will allow merchants to accept instant payments at checkout alongside existing payment methods, such as cards and wallets, without needing to undertake a separate, costly and time-consuming integration process.”

 

Source: Payments Cards and Mobile

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