Two payment delivery options to magnify the benefits
Adding more financial institutions to the instant payment ecosystem creates multiple benefits. It increases the opportunities for more businesses to send instant payments and extends the reach to more potential receivers – great news for businesses that had limited their instant payments volume, or not started, because of concerns about the availability of some beneficiaries.
“The Fed has been working closely with The Clearing House to ensure compatibility of functionality and rule sets between the two rails,” Carter explains. The Federal Reserve has a long history of providing payment services alongside private-sector providers, like it does with the dual ACH rails that are also operated by The Clearing House and the Fed.
That kind of redundancy means the two networks can back up one another if either one ever goes down, and creates benefits by allowing for both types of instant payments.
At U.S. Bank, clients won’t have to tell the bank they want to send a particular payment through the FedNow Service or by the RTP network. All they will need to do is instruct the bank to make an instant payment. Carter says the bank will then use the two rails, in tandem, to offer a seamless instant payment solution with broader coverage than either could provide on its own.
“With our intelligent routing solutions, we will be able to offer our clients whichever rail is appropriate for reaching their destination account,” he says.
“The bottom line is that instant payments will ultimately become ubiquitous,” Carter says, “and the faster businesses start to use them, the faster they will see the benefits.”