What’s Next in Payments Report

What 17 Payments Experts Expect From Instant Payments in 2024 and Beyond

December 2023

Real-time payments have been around half a decade, the FedNow Service is six months old and the future looks bright for instant payments. Seventeen executives stressed to PYMNTS that a few critical considerations need to be addressed for maximum potential, touching on everything from interoperability to risk management.

Instant payments will initially transform merchant/consumer interactions but will transform commercial transactions too
Providers — including FIs — will have to examine the infrastructure and connectivity needed to meet burgeoning demand.
Fraud and risk defenses will involve a combination of education and advanced technologies.


Register for Unlimited Access
Fill in the form below for free unlimited access to all our Trackers and Studies.

Thank you for registering. Please confirm your email to view all our Trackers.

    yesSubscribe to our daily newsletter, PYMNTS Today
    By completing this form, I have read and acknowledged the terms and conditions.


    2023 stands out as a banner year for instant payments.

    The FedNow® Service became the newest rail in the United States, closing 2023 with more than 300 financial institutions signing on and using the instant payment network. And The Clearing House’s RTP® Network, which has been operational for more than six years, came into the summer having crossed a significant milestone with more than half a billion instant payments, cumulatively, with more than 350 participating FIs.



    The use cases will proliferate as more banks sign on and as more businesses find that consumers are demanding speedier fund flows. In the comments that follow, 17 executives with a front-row seat to the continued rise of instant payments weigh in on the trends that will evolve in the near term — and what the long-term roadmap looks like too.

    Looking for Critical Mass

    Ingo Money CEO Drew Edwards said, “I’m going to bet that 2024 is a tipping point, thanks to FedNow.”  But market momentum cannot be sustained unless there’s connectivity between the broad range of payments rails — legacy and new rails alike — in mix-and-match fashion depending on different accounts and inbound and outbound flows, Edwards said.

     “We have a lot of people who want to receive instantly. But not a lot of people who want to send instantly,” said Doug Brown, president and general manager at NCR Voyix, “There needs to be a value proposition on both sides of the coin.”

     Jim Colassano, senior vice president of RTP product development at The Clearing House, echoed the sentiment, saying, “The demand is definitely there. And what we need to do is start providing the supply.”

    Michael Haney, head of product strategy at Galileo Financial Technologies, said that consumers are eager to pay bills on the due date, eliminating the uncertainties associated with traditional payment methods. Peer-to-peer payments, pay-by-bank at merchants and faster account-to-account transfers between different banks are gaining traction.

    Businesses, too, are exploring the benefits of instant payments for bill payments, customer refunds, employee payments and the emerging gig economy.

    Ecosystems Evolving — and Merchants and Consumers Are Earliest Beneficiaries

    First things first. Although in concept the instant payment is simple and direct on its face, the ecosystems and connections tying various stakeholders together are intricate and require some rewiring of processes and technologies.

    “Education is going to be key for all the players in the payment chain,” said Moa Agrell, senior banking partnerships manager at Trustly, as providers take stock of what they need to do to be ready for new waves of demand.

    As instant payments become more prevalent, it is highly likely that the business models of FIs and nonbank enterprises might evolve in-step with the money movement option’s growth and adoption.

    Agrell emphasized the need for FIs to understand the operational changes required for instant payments. From staffing needs to regulatory implications, FIs must adapt to the 24/7/365 nature of instant payments.

    The plumbing, so to speak, remains a key consideration.

    “A lot of instant payments is about moving toward this modern experience of being able to make a transaction and receive the money in real time, as one does with everything else in their life. But the issue is first we need the infrastructure,” said Sean Kiewiet, chief strategy officer and co-founder of Priority Technology Holdings.

    Collaboration between domestic instant payment networks and international instant payment systems can streamline the process of transferring funds across borders. By eliminating the need for multiple networks and platforms, instant payments can simplify cross-border transactions and reduce costs for businesses and consumers alike, Kieweit continued.

    “If I can just go through your network and go anywhere in the world, that’s the right answer,” he said.

    Interoperability Is a Goal

    Bridget Hall, leader of real-time payments at ACI Worldwide, said it will take some time for the disparate systems to be stitched together.

    “It’s very common to see domestic schemes go live [and] get established a bit before starting to [connect] to real-time [networks] in other countries,” she noted, referencing Immediate Cross-Border Payments, an ongoing pilot program launched by EBA ClearingSWIFT and TCH, with banking support from the U.S., the United Kingdom and Western European countries.

    But even as interoperability may be a ways off, there will be a groundswell of instant payment use cases in the U.S.

    Hicham Oudghiri, co-founder and CEO of Enigma Technologies, took stock of the various players spanning merchants, consumers, FIs and businesses. The most notable tailwinds, he said, will come as “the merchants are going to be the ones who are putting in place incentives for wider adoption.” The incentives might include discounting the prices charged for products and services if customers elect to pay with instant methods. That option may prove especially appealing to online platforms, he said, adding that “from a business model perspective, the merchant really wins.”

    Dave Scola, CEO of Form3, told PYMNTS that payroll offers a prime example. We’re used to being paid every two weeks, usually by ACH. But the emergence of the gig economy in recent years, and the volatility in payments — which can range from daily to a per-project basis — has offered a new use case for instant payments.

    Andy McHale, senior director of product and market strategy at Spreedly, predicted that “you’re going to see a lot of centralized experiences,” as customers can go online to see all of their cards and accounts, across all providers, in one place as users can move funds from place to place without friction.

    “There’s absolutely room for [instant payments] to grow, and it’s no flash in the pan,” McHale told PYMNTS. “There will be a mix of interesting payment options for consumers going forward.”

    “The levers that need to be pulled to move [instant payment] services forward on the consumer side really come down to a reduction in service fees,” said Ryan Dew, global head of product at i2c, as FIs and financial service providers interact with end customers. Positioning instant payment services as personal finance management tools can incentivize consumers by minimizing late charges on bill payments, Dew said.

    Shaunt Sarkissian, founder and CEO at AI-ID, said consumers are already primed to look for speed in their everyday financial lives, as peer-to-peer payment systems and platforms like Zelle have created an expectation for instantaneous transactions, setting the stage for broader adoption.

    Beyond the consumer-facing applications, he said, the real-time payments opportunity is most prevalent in business and B2B transactions. “If I get that money right away, I can start earning interest on it … immediacy has an impact for businesses and allows faster, even different, business models,” Sarkissian said.

    Ruben Salazar, senior vice president and global head of Visa Direct, told Karen Webster that the transition from traditional, ACH transactions toward faster payments can be a catalyst for more digital inclusion, as there are still billions of unbanked individuals and households around the globe (and about 4% of households are unbanked in the U.S.), without debit cards, savings accounts or checking accounts.

    “This is the ultimate goal as we facilitate the participation of more and more consumers and businesses in a larger, vibrant, digital economy,” he said.

    Fraud Remains a Concern

    The conventional wisdom is that faster payments translates into faster fraud, and the executives we queried said that a proactive approach — and robust security measures — are going to be the best lines of defense.

    “The user experience needs to be seamless and easy to use. If we’re going to make something faster, then the assumption is that it is going to be better for the consumer,” Mike Storiale, vice president of innovation development at Synchrony, said, adding that “ultimately, we need education and trust for the consumers and for the businesses about not only the benefits of instant payments around speed, the convenience, and security, but also how to mitigate fraud and make sure that everyone is staying safe in an evolved ecosystem.” Collaboration and adherence to common standards and protocols across the financial ecosystem are also essential for effective fraud detection in real time, Storiale said.

    Jon Budd, CEO of Juniper Payments, a PSCU company, said that artificial intelligence and machine learning will be potent weapons in breaking down and analyzing the risk across different silos of payments, from ACH to credit cards to debit cards. They will also help in examining individual accounts and patterns of behavior to identify anomalies.

    “This allows us a little bit of time to create some friction to make sure that payments are going where they are supposed to go,” Budd said.

    Mollie Curran, payments lead at Plaid, said risks are threefold. There’s identity risk — that merchants, banks and platforms can trust that someone is who they say they are. Solidifying that trust means ensuring that know your customer systems are connected to the rest of the commerce ecosystem, she said, and Plaid’s own KYC solutions allow data to be shared among stakeholders to identify risky consumers. Account risk, she said, mandates that verification and monitoring are robust. And finally, there remains transaction risk, which involves making sure the receiver of funds is legitimate as well.

    Irfan Ahmad, managing director and head of U.S. payments GTS at Bank of America, said banks are focused on ensuring safety and security across all transactions. In the U.S., instant payments still exist only as “credit push” fund flows.

    “The originator [is] in full control of when that payment goes out,” Ahmad said. But as “we start seeing more and more back-office systems for corporates move toward APIs, you’re going to have wires, ACH payments and instant payments all coming across APIs, and that’s going to give us the ability to start [looking] holistically at all the tools we have in place to mitigate risk.”

    About

    PYMNTS INTELLIGENCE

    PYMNTS Intelligence is a leading global data and analytics platform that uses proprietary data and methods to provide actionable insights on what’s now and what’s next in payments, commerce and the digital economy. Its team of data scientists include leading economists, econometricians, survey experts, financial analysts and marketing scientists with deep experience in the application of data to the issues that define the future of the digital transformation of the global economy. This multi-lingual team has conducted original data collection and analysis in more than three dozen global markets for some of the world’s leading publicly traded and privately held firms.


    We are interested in your feedback on this report. If you have questions or comments, or if you would like to subscribe to this report, please email us at feedback@pymnts.com.

    Disclaimer

    The What’s Next in Payments Series may be updated periodically. While reasonable efforts are made to keep the content accurate and up to date, PYMNTS MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, REGARDING THE CORRECTNESS, ACCURACY, COMPLETENESS, ADEQUACY, OR RELIABILITY OF OR THE USE OF OR RESULTS THAT MAY BE GENERATED FROM THE USE OF THE INFORMATION OR THAT THE CONTENT WILL SATISFY YOUR REQUIREMENTS OR EXPECTATIONS. THE CONTENT IS PROVIDED “AS IS” AND ON AN “AS AVAILABLE” BASIS. YOU EXPRESSLY AGREE THAT YOUR USE OF THE CONTENT IS AT YOUR SOLE RISK. PYMNTS SHALL HAVE NO LIABILITY FOR ANY INTERRUPTIONS IN THE CONTENT THAT IS PROVIDED AND DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THE CONTENT, INCLUDING THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND NONINFRINGEMENT AND TITLE. SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OF CERTAIN WARRANTIES, AND, IN SUCH CASES, THE STATED EX CLUSIONS DO NOT APPLY. PYMNTS RESERVES THE RIGHT AND SHOULD NOT BE LIABLE SHOULD IT EXERCISE ITS RIGHT TO MODIFY, INTERRUPT, OR DISCONTINUE THE AVAILABILITY OF THE CONTENT OR ANY COMPONENT OF IT WITH OR WITHOUT NOTICE.
    PYMNTS SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER, AND, IN PARTICULAR, SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR INCIDENTAL DAM AGES, OR DAMAGES FOR LOST PROFITS, LOSS OF REVENUE, OR LOSS OF USE, ARISING OUT OF OR RELATED TO THE CONTENT, WHETHER SUCH DAMAGES ARISE IN CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE, TORT, UNDER STATUTE, IN EQUITY, AT LAW, OR OTHERWISE, EVEN IF PYMNTS HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
    SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW FOR THE LIMITATION OR EXCLUSION OF LIABILITY FOR INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, AND IN SUCH CASES SOME OF THE ABOVE LIMITATIONS DO NOT APPLY. THE ABOVE DISCLAIMERS AND LIMITATIONS ARE PROVIDED BY PYMNTS AND ITS PARENTS, AFFILIATED AND RELATED COMPANIES, CONTRACTORS, AND SPONSORS, AND EACH OF ITS RESPECTIVE DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, MEMBERS, EMPLOYEES, AGENTS, CONTENT COMPONENT PROVIDERS, LICENSORS, AND ADVISERS.
    Components of the content original to and the compilation produced by PYMNTS is the property of PYMNTS and cannot be reproduced without its prior written permission.