Transition plan
On 19 June 2023, we migrated CHAPS payments to ISO 20022 messaging (Transition State 2.1 of the RTGS Renewal Programme).
The introduction of the new RTGS core ledger and settlement engine (Transition State 3) will take place in Spring 2025.
We will mandate certain elements of enhanced data from 1 May 2025. From this date, CHAPS rules will require Purpose Codes and LEIs to be included in domestic CHAPS payments between financial institutions (pacs.009 CORE messages and certain pacs.008 messages). The rules will also mandate Purpose Codes for property transactions.
On 13 February 2023, the Bank also published a response to two consultations published in April 2022, which sought industry views on the Future Roadmap for RTGS and the RTGS CHAPS tariff framework.
The consultation on the Future Roadmap for RTGS Beyond 2024 proposed a number of ambitious and innovative features in line with our vision to develop an RTGS service which is fit for the future, by offering new ways of connecting, more flexible services and enhanced resilience.
Following feedback from industry, we will prioritise:
- Features providing resilient channels to connect to RTGS, which include evolving settlement contingency and introducing an alternative channel to connect to RTGS; and
- Features supporting innovation and global initiatives, which include synchronised settlement, extended operating hours and non-payment APIs.
In February 2024 we published two Discussion Papers – one on RTGS operating hours and another on RTGS access policies. These papers aim to be the basis for further research and dialogue with the payments industry on these important topics. Feedback is requested by 30 April 2024.
The Bank will work closely with industry to define service propositions for these priority categories before deciding which features to introduce and in what order. Progressing the priority features will be key to allowing RTGS to offer the highest degree of resilience while facilitating innovation and competition in the fast-changing payments landscape. Future Roadmap consultation response.
The consultation response on the revised RTGS CHAPS tariff framework set out the five key principles for a tariff framework as being: proportionate; simple and efficient; stable and predictable; supportive of competition and access; and supportive of the Bank’s monetary and financial stability mission. Overall, industry respondents were supportive of these key principles. The Bank has now used the feedback received to refine and set the parameters for the framework. On this basis, the revised tariff framework aims to introduce better alignment of tariffs with gross system usage, using a combination of volume and value-based fees. We plan to share with tariff payers in Summer 2023 more detail on expected costs for the first years of the new service. Revised RTGS CHAPS tariff consultation response.