Overview
As older payment methods recede, pay-by-bank is emerging as a contender at the point of sale. It allows consumers to continue using the funds in their checking accounts, as they do with ACH payments, but adds greater security with real-time authentication and confirmation of payment.
Merchants, too, benefit from the security of pay-by-bank payments, because they don’t have to store sensitive consumer information. For banks, there’s a loss of interchange revenue, but they can rework their strategies to remain the most favored payment method by their customers.
Key questions discussed in this report:
- What is pay-by-bank and how does it work?
- What are the advantages of pay-by-bank for consumers and merchants?
- What are the implications of pay-by-bank for financial institutions and how can they adjust to account for those?
Companies mentioned:
Bank of America, Catch, GoCardless, Jack Henry, J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, Mastercard, Paymentus, Paypal, Trustly, Venmo, Visa, Zelle
Book a Meeting with the Author
Related content
Invisible Debit: When the Card Disappears, Usage Remains
The debit experience is expected to feel as seamless and digital as the apps customers use every day. As card‑not‑present spending surges and debit quietly powers P2P and wallet tr...
Small Business, Big Debit Opportunity: The FI Counter to P2P Fintechs
Small businesses are leveraging peer-to-peer apps for business purposes, and PayPal and Cash App are excelling in this space. Banks must not grow complacent. They should be competi...
State of Debit 2026
Despite headwinds that include significant financial strain on consumers despite a broadly stable economy, debit remains resilient—especially among younger consumers and lower inco...
Make informed decisions in a digital financial world