Data hub · Payments · Faster Payments Checked 2 Jun 2026

UK Faster Payments Statistics 2026

The UK's Faster Payment System (FPS) moved 5.547 billion payments in 2025, up 8.9% year on year, and cleared £1.27 trillion in the final quarter alone. Volume has risen every year since 2017. Faster Payments has become the default way to move money instantly between UK bank accounts, and its growth is shifting from simply replacing cash to powering business payments, Open Banking and platform pay-outs.

How to read this page
  • Annual volume is the calendar-year total from Pay.UK's annual statistics; quarterly value and volume are from the Pay.UK Quarterly Statistical Report, latest reading Q4 2025.
  • “Faster Payments” covers single immediate payments, forward-dated and standing-order payments routed over the Faster Payment System; it excludes Bacs and CHAPS.
  • Year-on-year growth compares Q4 2025 against Q4 2024 on a like-for-like basis.
Data period: 2025 – 2025-12·Last reviewed: 2 Jun 2026·Quarterly updates·Sources: Pay.UK
1.

UK Faster Payments at a glance

The annual scale of the system, plus the latest quarter's value, volume and growth rate.

Lead figures The two most-cited numbers: annual volume and the latest quarterly value cleared.
Faster Payments, annual volume
5.55bn
▲ rising2025 total
5.547 billion payments cleared in 2025, up from 1.7 billion in 2017. Volume has grown every year since.
Pay.UK Annual Statistics2025
Value settled, latest quarter
£1.27tn
▲ Q4 2025£1,270bn
Faster Payments cleared £1.27 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2025, the value moving in a single three-month window.
Pay.UK Quarterly Statistical ReportQ4 2025
Supporting figures Latest-quarter transaction count and the year-on-year growth rate.
Transactions, latest quarter
1.46bn
▲ Q4 20251,455m
1,455 million payments cleared in Q4 2025, an average of roughly 16 million a day across the UK.
Pay.UK Quarterly Statistical ReportQ4 2025
Volume growth, year on year
8.9%
▲ vs Q4 2024like-for-like
Quarterly volume grew 8.9% year on year, showing Faster Payments is growing for reasons beyond the decline of cash and cheques.
Pay.UK Quarterly Statistical ReportQ4 2025
2.

Volume has more than tripled since 2017, with no down year

Faster Payments grew from 1.7 billion transactions in 2017 to 5.5 billion in 2025. The trajectory is unusually clean: every year is higher than the last, through the pandemic and the cost-of-living squeeze alike.

UK Faster Payments annual transaction volume, 2017–2025

Billions of payments per calendar year. Faster Payments added roughly half a billion transactions in 2025 alone.

YearVolume (bn)YoY
20171.66
20182.04▲ +23%
20192.44▲ +19%
20202.85▲ +17%
20213.42▲ +20%
20223.94▲ +15%
20234.50▲ +14%
20245.09▲ +13%
20255.55▲ +9%
Source: Pay.UK Annual Summary of Payment Statistics · calendar-year totals Checked 2 Jun 2026
What this means

Growth is slowing in percentage terms but still adds around half a billion payments a year. The new headroom comes less from replacing cash and more from Open Banking, payroll and platform pay-outs, which all settle over Faster Payments. Instant payment is becoming the norm UK businesses expect.

3.

What Faster Payments means for a business in practice

Faster Payments sits behind many everyday bank transfers a business sends or receives: paying a supplier today, refunding a customer, moving money between accounts, topping up payroll, or taking an Open Banking payment from a customer. The money moves in seconds, 24/7, including weekends and bank holidays.

Faster Payments is not the same as Open Banking. Open Banking pay-by-bank flows are initiated through a regulated third party but still settle over Faster Payments underneath. Open Banking reached 351 million payments in 2025; that volume is a subset of total Faster Payments traffic, not a separate rail.
4.

Why Faster Payments growth matters now

The headline numbers are only half the story. What makes them worth tracking is where the growth is coming from, because it is starting to reshape how UK businesses get paid.

Three shifts behind the numbers

Bank transfers are becoming a checkout method. Through Open Banking, customers can now pay a merchant straight from their bank account at checkout (“pay by bank”), and those payments settle over Faster Payments. What used to be a way to pay a friend is turning into a way to pay a business. See how this fits alongside cards in our payment processing guide.

Instant money movement is now expected. Marketplaces, platforms and gig employers pay out to sellers and workers; businesses refund customers and pay suppliers. Increasingly the expectation is that the money arrives in seconds, not in a multi-day batch, which pushes more volume onto Faster Payments.

Account-to-account is starting to compete with cards. Because a Faster Payment carries no card interchange, pay-by-bank can be cheaper for a merchant to accept than a card. It is not a like-for-like swap yet, as cards still lead on buyer protection and one-tap checkout, but for the right transactions the cost gap is real. Weigh the trade-offs against card acceptance in payment processing, and against where you hold funds in business banking.

Open Banking volume: Open Banking Ltd, 351 million payments in 2025. Cost comparison is directional; actual acceptance costs depend on provider and transaction type. Checked 2 Jun 2026
5.

Faster Payments, Bacs and CHAPS do different jobs

The UK runs three sterling account-to-account rails. They are not competitors so much as tools for different tasks: speed, bulk, or high value.

The three UK account-to-account rails compared

RailSpeedTypical useAnnual volumeNotes
Faster PaymentsSeconds, 24/7Single transfers, standing orders, Open Banking5.55bn (2025)Bank-set limits up to £1m
Bacs3-day cycleDirect Debits, salary and supplier runs~6bnLow cost, batch-based
CHAPSSame-dayHigh-value, time-critical (property, treasury)under 0.3bnSettles over 90% of sterling value
Source: Pay.UK and Bank of England payment statistics · volumes are latest published annual figures Checked 2 Jun 2026
What this means

For a business, the practical rule is simple: use Faster Payments for everyday transfers that need to arrive now, Bacs for predictable bulk runs like payroll where cost matters more than speed, and CHAPS only for large, time-critical, irreversible payments such as completing on a property. For the full picture across all UK payment methods, see the UK Payments Statistics hub.

6.

Sources and methodology

Every figure on this page maps to a named primary source below: Pay.UK, which operates the Faster Payment System, and the Bank of England for CHAPS settlement value.

3 sources Source register
SourcePublisherPeriod coveredTypeLast checked
Annual Summary of Payment StatisticsPay.UKCalendar year 2025Scheme operator2 Jun 2026
Quarterly Statistical ReportPay.UKTo Q4 2025Scheme operator2 Jun 2026
CHAPS settlement statisticsBank of EnglandLatest annualCentral bank2 Jun 2026
How we check the data

Scheme operator figures first

Pay.UK operates the Faster Payment System and publishes the authoritative volume and value series. We take annual totals from the annual summary and the latest quarter from the quarterly report.

Clear scope

Faster Payments figures exclude Bacs and CHAPS. Where we cite those rails for comparison, we name the separate source and period.

Growth is like-for-like

Year-on-year growth compares the same quarter a year apart, avoiding seasonal distortion from comparing adjacent quarters.

Data integrity

Headline figures map to Pay.UK, the scheme operator, with CHAPS comparison value from the Bank of England. Comparative annual volumes for Bacs and CHAPS are the latest published figures and are labelled as approximate where the scheme reports a rounded total. Last full review: 2 Jun 2026.

Faster Payments FAQ

Common questions about UK Faster Payments

How many Faster Payments are made in the UK each year?
5.547 billion Faster Payments were cleared in 2025, up 8.9% on 2024. Volume has risen every year since 2017, when the figure was 1.7 billion.
How much value goes through Faster Payments?
Faster Payments settled £1.27 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2025 alone (Pay.UK Quarterly Statistical Report). The rail carries everyday transfers; the highest-value sterling payments run over CHAPS instead.
Is there a limit on a Faster Payment?
Yes, but it is set by each bank rather than the scheme. Many providers allow single payments up to £1 million, though daily and per-payment limits vary. Payments above a bank's Faster Payments limit are usually sent via CHAPS.
What is the difference between Faster Payments and Open Banking?
Open Banking pay-by-bank payments are initiated through a regulated third party but settle over Faster Payments underneath. Open Banking reached 351 million payments in 2025, a subset of total Faster Payments traffic, not a separate rail.