EU Parliament passes new rules on cross-border payment charges

European parliamentarians have voted in favour of new rules which will force banks to slash fees on cross-border euro payments between EU countries that are in the euro zone and those that are not.

3 comments

EU Parliament passes new rules on cross-border payment charges

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

The plenary adopted by 532 votes in favour, 22 against and 55 abstentions, to push through the changes before the end of the year.

The new measures will also protect consumers from being charged arbitrary costs for currency conversions. At each transaction, they will be informed about the amount to be paid in the local currency and the currency of their account.

Consumers will receive an electronic push notification such as a text message, e-mail or notification through the payer's mobile or web banking application about the applicable currency conversion charges.

These notification services have to be offered free of charge and banks will also have to disclose the estimated full cost of currency conversion in the case of bank transfers before the payment is made.

Eva Maydell (EPP, BG), rapporteur, states: “150 million EU citizens and 6 million businesses living and operating in countries outside the Eurozone have been paying much higher charges for transferring euro than their Eurozone counterparts. This will no longer be the case and all Europeans will pay significantly lower charges, which will save them more than 1 billion euro annually. This is the second, small EU revolution after the abolishment of roaming fees.

It is a huge step forward to completing the Single Market for payments, putting Eurozone and non-Eurozone businesses on a level playing field.”

Sponsored [Webinar] Creating a Seamless Banking App Experience

Comments: (3)

Brian Weakliam CEO at Bankhawk

€1bn savings is a drop in the ocean and does not go far enough. Maybe there is more devil in the detail!

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

While on the subject, SEPA was supposed to equalize fees for crossborder EURO payments within EUROzone countries to those for domestic EURO payments within each EUROzone country. Anyone knows how much impact SEPA had on the banking industry's revenues and profits?

Urs Meier Solution Architect Payment Solutions at Tata Consultancy Services

I hope this change is only for retail customers and not for corporates.

Does this notification only applies on debtor agent or as well creditor agent, resp. each bank doing a currency conversion?

I'm wondering if this measure will raise transparency for customer, actually on existing statements, the exchange rate of currency conversion should be stated. Only improvement is electronic push notification, but then its too late for the customer to intervene, payment will be executed as notified. 

[Webinar] How AI is re-shaping financial servicesFinextra Promoted[Webinar] How AI is re-shaping financial services