United States vs United Kingdom · Real-time payment systems compared
| Capability | FedNow | Faster Payments |
|---|---|---|
| QR Code Payments | — | — |
| Wallet Support | — | — |
| 24/7 Availability | ✓ | ✓ |
| Cross-Border | — | — |
| ISO 20022 | ✓ | ✓ |
| Request to Pay | ✓ | ✓ |
| Open API | ✓ | ◐ |
| Alias/Proxy | — | — |
The Federal Reserve's instant payment service enabling US banks and credit unions to send and receive payments in seconds, 24/7/365. Launched in July 2023, FedNow is the first new Fed payment rail in 50 years and aims to democratise instant payments by giving all 10,000+ US depository institutions direct access (unlike the private-sector RTP). Supports credit transfers up to $500K with plans to add request-for-payment and other features. Note: FedNow shows extreme growth rates as it scales from a low base β value jumped 35x in Q3 2024 as larger institutions onboarded, which is typical for newly launched payment systems.
The UK's core instant payment system handling bank-to-bank transfers up to Β£1M, with most payments arriving in seconds. Originally launched with a Β£10K limit in 2008, it was one of the world's first real-time retail payment systems. Settles via the Bank of England's RTGS system with net deferred settlement. Managed by Pay.UK, the FPS rail also processes standing orders and forward-dated payments, but the data shown here covers Single Immediate Payments only β the real-time component. The New Payments Architecture (NPA) programme is modernising FPS with ISO 20022 messaging.